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THE 

$3<l> 

RIPTION 

OF 

IRELAND, 

thereof  as 

it  is 

at  this  Present 

In   Anno    159S. 

NOW     FOR     THE     FIRST     TIME     PUBL1SHEO 

From  a  Manuscript  preserved  in    Clongowes-Woed  College, 

Copious    $otrs    anli    Illustrations 


IIY 


EDMUND      HOGAN, 

Pries/  of  the  Society  of  Jesus 


Cuille  peapa  ap  Gipinti  615:  Addition  of  knowledge  on  holy  Erin 

Cpiallam  cimceall  na  poola.  Let  us  pass  round  Ireland, 

Sluaipio  pip  ap  puppospa;  Let  men  go  by  order  ; 

ap  na  poiDib  a  bpuileatn  From  the  lands  on  which  we  are 

Ma  eoijjeaoa  cuapruigeam.  The  provinces  let  us  visit. 

Irish  Topograph-tcal  Poems. 


IBublm : 

M.    H.    GILL   &   SON,    50   Upper   Sackville   Street. 

liontion : 

BERNARD    QUARITCH,    iS    Piccadilly 

1878. 


33rmtrt  bp 

dublin  steam  trin  ting  companv, 

94.    95.    96,    middle    abuisv    street, 

DUBLIN. 

07/ 


TABLE     OF     CONTENTS. 


General  Description  of  Ireland,  i. 

Ulster,  2,  246,  295. 

Louthe,  3,  260,  296. 

Downe,  6,  260,  296. 

Antrim,  13,  260,  296. 

Armagh,  19,  250,  261,  296. 

Monaghan,  23,  262,  296. 

Fermanagh,  24,  247,  262,  297. 

Tyrone,  25,  249,  262,  297. 

Coleraine  or  Deny,  28,  249,   262,  297. 

Dunigal,  29,  248,  262. 

Leinster,  35. 

Dublin,  35,  263,  298. 

Wicklow,  39,  259,  264. 

Kildare,  44,  252,  264. 

Catherlagh,  50,  253,  265,  298. 

Wexford,  55,  256,  265,  298. 

Kilkenny,  65,  254,  266. 

Queen's  County,  73,  267,  325. 

King's  County,  81,  268. 

Countie  of  Elye,  87. 

Meath,  89,  268. 

West  Meath,  102,  270. 

Longford,  113,  270. 

Cavan,  117,  246,  271,  300. 

Connaught,  122. 

Clare,  124,  271. 

Gal  way,  131,  272,  300. 

Mayo,  140,  275,  300. 

Sligo,  144,  275. 

Leytrim,  147,  276,  300. 

Roscommon,  150,  276. 


Mounster,  156. 

Waterford,  157,  277. 

Cork,  167,  278. 

Kerry,  187,  282. 

Limerick,  196,  283,  300. 

Tipperary,  207,  284. 

Noblemen,  217,  349. 

Bishops,  233. 

Havens,  238. 

Revenue,  240. 

Names  of  the  Council  of  Ireland,  244. 

Appendix,  246. 

1 .  Chichester's  Account  of  Ulster,  246. 

2.  Present  Known  Representatives  of 

the  Families  Extant  in  1598,  260. 

3.  Catholic  Clergy,  285. 

4.  Catalogue  of  Irish  Jesuits  in  1609. 

290. 

5.  Irish    Writers  ;      Irish      Colleges 

Abroad,  294. 

6.  Additional    Notes   from    Camden. 

296. 

7.  Barnaby    Riche's     Description   of 

Dublin,  299. 

8.  Records  of  Events,  Battle  of  Bel- 

lanaboy,  &c,  301. 

9.  Some  Original  Letters  Written  this 

Year,  339. 

10.  Parliamentary  Lists  of  1560,  1585. 

and  1613,  p.  349. 

11.  Addenda  et  Corrigenda,  p.  353. 

12.  Round  Towers  and  Index,  p.  357. 


PRE  FACE 


The  manuscript  book,  from  which  this  description  of  Ireland 
has  been  printed,  is  a  royal  quarto,  bound  in  vellum,  containing 
ninety-two  pages  of  "  The  Description  of  Ireland  as  it  is  in 
hoc  anno  1598,"  and  fifty-four  pages  of"  Haynes'  Observations 
on  the  State  of  Ireland  in  1600" — both  specimens  of  the  same 
exquisite  penmanship.  It  bears  on  the  first  page  the  auto- 
graph of  the  celebrated  Father  Betagh,  S.  J.,  after  whose 
death,  in  181 1,  it  passed,  with  his  other  MSS,,  to  his  distin- 
guished pupil,  Father  Kenny,  S.  J.,  by  whom  it  was  deposited 
in  Clongowes  Wood  College  in  the  year  18 14.  It  is  said  by 
competent  judges  to  be  about  one  hundred  years  old,  and  it 
is  proved  by  the  Betagh  autograph  and  the  Blauw*  watermark 
to  have  been  written  between  the  years  1756  and  181 1. 

It  is  therefore  a  transcript ;  and  such  it  professes  to  be 
in  the  following  marginal  notesb: — '  These  lines  from  being  a 
note  in  the  margin  hath  crept  into  the  text ; '  '  cancelled  in  the 
Original;'  'In  the  original  the  word  seemeth  to  be  Omelie, 
but  in  my  opinion  it  should  be  O'Reillie.'  '  The  original'  was 
compiled  in  the  winter  of  1598,  as  appears  from  the  title  and 
the  following-  entries  :  '  O'Rourke  hath  bene  a  Rebell  savins 
a  little  time  this  last  sommer,  but  he  revolted  again  ; '  '  Sir 
Thomas  of  Desmonde's  Son  latelie  made  Earle  of  Desmonde, 
Capten  of  the  Rebellion  in  Mounster  raised  in  October  last ;' 
'  Donell  Spaniaughe  of  late  sturred  up  by  the  Earle  of  Tyrone  ;  ' 

»  "The  firm  of  Blauw  was   established  in  b  The  marginal  notes  of  the  MS.  have,  for 

1756" — Letter  from  that  Dutch  firm,  received  the  sake  of  appearance,  baen  inserted,  within 
through  the  kindness  of  Heer  Nyhoff.  brackets,  in  the  text. 


VI.  PREFACE. 

'  Sligo  Castle  was  demolished  four  years  ago  and  since  not 
reedified.'0  These  entries,  and  the  references  to  O'More  and 
Tyrrell  in  Queen's  County,  to  O'Ferrall,  to  Westmeath  and  to 
the  political  state  of  each  county,  point  to  the  winter  of  1598,  d 
while  the  silence  about  the  death  of  Sir  T.  Norreys  in  June 
1599,  and  of  Sir  E.  Denny  in  February  1599,  seems  to  indicate 
that  our  MS.  was  written  before  these  dates.6  However,  the 
list  of  Noblemen  appears  to  have  been  penned  between  the  year 
1603,  and  1607  (the  year  of  "  The  Flight  of  the  Earls);  "  the 
list  of  Bishops  between  1605  and  1610;  and  the  list  of  the 
Members  of  the  Council  between  December  1607  and  De- 
cember 1608,  as  '  Lord  Davies  '  came  to  Ireland  after  October  1, 
1608,  and  Winche  came  after  November  11,  1607,  and,  on 
the  8th  December,  1608,  succeeded  Ley  as  Chief  Justice. 
Again,  of  the  many  marginal  notes,  which  correct  or  supple- 
ment the  text,  and  which  are  here  inserted  in  brackets,  two 
were  added  after  Mountjoy's  death  in  April,  1605,  one  after 
O'Dogherty's  death  in  July,  1608,  and  one  after  161 7,  when 
Rothe's  '  Analecta'  was  published/ 

The  author  was  a  man  of  English  sympathies,  and,  no  doubt, 
an  Englishman,  and  an  English  official ;  his  initials  are,  I 
strongly  suspect,  those  given  in  the  marginal  note,  at  page 
31,  '  Belleke  is  now  the  possession  of  S.  H.';s  and  his  name 
was.T  presume,  S.  H[aynes],  as  Haynes  is  the  writer  of  the 
second  treatise  in  the  book.  But  since  I  cannot  name  the 
author  with  certainty,  I  may  be  told — 

To  "  pass  the  foundling  by,  a  work  of  chance ; 
Why  into  noble  families  advance 
A  nameless  issue  ?  "  h 

e  PF— !49>  181,  63,  147.  Fpp.  20,  160.  pp.— 22  &  23 were  written  soon 

d  See  Record  of  Events  of  the  Year,  p.  305,  after  August,  1C98. 

etc.,  and  pp.  7S,  115,  112,  44,  39.  %  Quaere,  is'it  S(ir)  II(enry  Fulliott  ?) 

•pp.  184,  190.  'Dr.  den. 


PREFACE.  Vll. 

Why  place  this  thing  of  obscure  or  questionable  origin  by 
the  side  of  the  authentic  Descriptions  by  Stanihurst,  Derricke, 
Dymmok,  Camden,  and  Riche  ?  The  answer  is,  that  '  the 
original,'  spoken  of  above,  whose  existence  cannot  fairly  be 
doubted,  and  which  may  be  slumbering  in  some  home  or 
foreign  archivium,  is  a  respectable  relative,  if  not  the  parent, 
of  the  best  descriptions  of  Ireland  hitherto  published,  and  is 
superior  to  all  of  them.  The  '  Dobbs  MS.'  description  ot 
Antrim,  written1  circ,  1598;  Lord  Burghley's  copy  of  Marshall 
Bagnall's  description  of  Ulster,  writtenk  in  1586;  the  Carew 
MS.  description  of  Ulster,  written1  in  1 586 ;  and  Dymmok's 
'  Treatise  of  Ireland,'  m  written  circ.  1600,  are  all,  as  far  as  they 
go,  substantially,  and,  I  may  say,  verbally  the  same  as  the 
Betagh  MS.;  while  the  'Perambulation  of  Leinster  in  1596,'" and 
the  state  papers  given  in  the  published  Calendars,  in  the  '  Life 
of  MacCarthy  Mor,'  and  in  Hardiman's  '  Iar-Connacht,'  res- 
pectively corroborate  its  statements  regarding  Leinster,  Munster 
and  Connaught.  These  concurrent  accounts  are  enough,  I 
think,  to  give  authority  to  our  MS.,  which  besides,  as  far  as  one 
can  judge  from  an  extract  on  Wexford,  printed  in  the  '  Annuary 
of  the  Kilkenny  Archaeological  Society  for  1855,  '  resembles 
'  The  Description  of  the  Provinces  of  Ireland,  Carew  MSS. 
635,'  which  Dymmok  is  said  to  have  abridged. 

Thus  the  critical  and  corrective  tests  of  collation,  to  which 
it  has  been  subjected,  establish  and  illustrate  its  genuine  cha- 
racter, and  entitle  it  to  the  respect  shewn  to  other  published 
descriptions  ;  moreover  it  challenges  special  attention  on  account 

i  Published  by  Dubourdieu  in  1S12.  m  Edited  by  Rev.  R.  Butler,  A.B.  in  1843. 

k  Published  by  Hore  in  1S54.  n  Published  in  the  calendar  of  Carew  Mss. 

1  Printed  as  "  a  very  interesting  and  instruc-  ad  an.  1596.     N.B.    The   Calendar  of  Carew 

tive  survey  "  in  the  Calendars  of  State  Papers  Mss.  (1589  to   1600)  is  often  quoted  and   its 

by  Dr.  Russell  and  Mr.  Prendergast.  title  abridged  to  Car.  Cal. 


Vlll.  PREFACE. 

of  many  particulars,  which  it  alone  gives,  relating  to  the  chief 
towns    and  castles,  the    chieftains,    noblemen,    and  gentlemen, 
and  the  political  state   of  each  county.      Finding  that  it  was 
much    valued    by   antiquarians    highly    qualified    to   gauge    its 
worth,0  and  that   it  occupied  ground,  which  has  been  hitherto 
unappropriated  or  treated  with  but  scant  attention  ;  and  hoping 
that  it  would  reward,  while  it  invited  editorial  care,  '  I  gave  the 
venture  '  to  edit,  supplement,  and  illustrate  it,  and  to  try  (though 
unsuccessfully)  to  raise  it  to  the  dignity  of  an  old-world  Topo- 
graphical Dictionary  and  primitive  Directory  of  the  year  1598 — a 
hard  and  humble  task, '  a  work  suerly  full  of  unsavoury  toyle  .  .  . 
which  I  write,  not  of  vanity  to  commend  my  diligence,  but  of 
necessity  to  excuse   mine  imperfection.'0     The  records  of  the 
same  time  and  character0-  were  ransacked,  '  which  would  minister 
furniture'0  for  my  notes;  the  archaic,  or  rather  the  perverse 
and  profligate,  spelling  of  the   16th  century  has  been  followed 
in  all  its  freaks  ;  and   the  notes  are  put  together  according  to 
the  method  of  Hardiman,  O'Donovan,  and  Dr.  Reeves,  except 
in  the  case  of  Ulster,  where  the  peculiar  social  condition   of 
that  province,  and  the  necessity  of  collating  the  '  Dobbs,'  Bagnal, 
and  Betagh  MSS.  made  me  sacrifice  symmetry  and  reserve  the 
notes  for  the  Appendix.     The  reader  will  find  mentioned  over 
one  hundred  epitaphs,  wayside  crosses,  and  other  souvenirs  of 
those  times  ;  but  not  much  concerning  the  round  towers  and  the 
manners  and  customs  of  the  people,  as  these  things  are  outside 
the  object  of  the  original  work,  and  the  editor  is  preparing  a 
separate  book  on  the  manners  and  customs  of  the  16th  century, 
and  is  too  lightly  equipped  to  deal  with  the  towers  and  such 
antiquarian  matters.       On  the   other  hand  many  may  find  an 

0  Among  others,  Mr.  Gilbert,  the  author  of  p  Campion's  Historie  of  Ireland, 

"the  Manuscript  Materials  of  Irish  History."  i  See  list  of  Descriptions  of  Ireland  p.  xi. 


PREFACE.  IX. 

interest  in  the  Original  Documents,  the  Parliamentary  Lists,  the 
List  of  the  present  known  representatives  of  the  old  families,1" 
and  the  full  record  of  the  events  of  1598,  which  is  given  in  the 
very  words  of  the  State  Papers  and  other  contemporary  author- 
ities.5 From  the  inspection  of  this  record  (p.  315),  and  of  the 
old  map  of  the  escheated  county  of  Armagh,  done  in  1609,  it 
is  clear  that  O' Donovan,  Tucker,  and  Larcom,'  were  mistaken 
with  regard  to  the  site  of  the  battle-field  of  Belanahabuy,  and 
that  the  trench  was  two-thirds,  or  '  two  miles  '  of  the  distance 
from  Armagh,  and  one-third  or  '  one  mile  '  from  Blackwater 
Fort.  This  trench  is  now  a  drain  crossing  the  solid  ground 
Ana/ia,n  and  carrying  its  water  under  Bagnall's  Bridge  ;  and 
beyond  it  is  still  the  '  scons  made  on  the  top  of  the  hill  beyond 
the  same,'"  and  near  it  there  is  '  a  mayne  bogg.'v  Moreover,  in  the 
map  of  1609 — 'ye  long  trenche  of  ye  forde '  is  distinctly 
sketched,  and  also  the  Armagh  road,  which  here  branches  off 
to    Blackwater   Fort  and  Charlemont. 

Having  written  this  much  of  the  history,  the  author,  autho- 
rity, and  merit  of  our  MS.,  of  the  method  of  its  editor,  and  of 
the  site  of  the  battle  of  Anaha  or  Bel-Anaha-buy,  '  it  remaineth 
that,'  with  Campion,  '  I  request  my  countrymen  to  bend  their 
good  liking  to  my  good  will,  and  to  deliver  me  from  all  unjust 
suspicions,'  as  I  have  endeavoured  to  be  sternly  archaeological, 
and  to  handle  my  documents  with  an  antiquarian  temper,  or,  shall 
I  say,  '  with  a  benevolent  neutrality.'  I  may  add,  with  Camden, 
that  '  if  some  there  are  who  contemn  this  study  of  antiquitie  as  a 
back-looking  curiosity  ...  I   am  not  destitute  of  reasons    by 

r  Compiled  from  the  works  of  Sir  B.  Burke,  *  Annals  of  the  Four  Masters,  note  p.  2060; 

Lodge,  Archdall,  O'Donovan,  and  others.  and  the  Ordnance  Survey,  Armagh,  in  the  R. 

•  The    memoirs  of  O'Neill,  M'Carthy,  and  I.  Academy. 

Tyrill,  promised  at   p.  176,  could  not  be  in-  u  See  Ordnance  six-inch  Map  of  Armagh, 

serted  for  sundry  reasons.  y  pp.  316,  317. 


X.  PREFACE. 

which  I  might  approve  this  my  purpose  to  well-bred,  well-mean- 
ing men,  who  tender  the  glory  of  their  native  land  .  .  .  but  if 
any  there  be,  who  are  desirous  to  be  strangers  in  their  own 
soile,  and  forrainers  in  their  own  city,  they  may  so  continue — 
for  such  I  have  not  taken  these  pains.'  Finally,  with  the  Four 
Masters,  I  think  '  it  is  clear  through  the  whole  world,  wher- 
ever  there  is  nobility  or  honour,  that  nothing  is  more  glorious 
than  to  give  the  knowledge  of  antiquity  of  old  authors,  and  the 

knowledge  of  the  chiefs  who  lived  in  the  days  of  yore 

and  that  it  was  a  cause  of  pity  (for  the  glory  of  God  and  the 
honour  of  Erin)  that  the  race  of  the  Gael  have  gone  under  a 
cloud:"  and  hence  I  publish  this  Description  of  Ireland — 

To    THE    GLORY    OF    GoD    AND    THE    HONOUR    OF    ERIN. 

Oo  cum  J5^0,I1e  ^  a5ur  Onolia  nc(  h-Gjieann. 


Milltown  Park,  Dublin, 
May,  the  ist,  1878. 


XI. 

LIST  OF  DESCRIPTIONS  OF  IRELAND. 

i.     Topographical  Poems  of  O'Duggan  and  O'Heerin. 

2.  MS.  Abbreviate  of  Ireland  and  Description  of  the  Power  of  Irishmen,  by 

Dean  Nowell  who  died  in  1576. 

3.  Campion's,  in  1575. 

4.  Derricke's  '  Image  of  Ireland,'  1581. 

5.  Carew  MSS.,  No.  635. 

6.  Stanihurst's  '  Plaine  and  Perfect  Description,'  1586. 

7.  A  brife  Description  by  Payne,  in  1589. 

8.  Dymmok's  '  Treatice  of  Ireland,'  circ.  1598. 

9.  Camden's  in  1607  ;  the  best  hitherto  published. 

10.  Barnaby  Riche's  '  New  Description  of  Ireland,'  in  1610.' 

11.  Moryson's,  in  16 17. 

DESCRIPTIONS   OF  PARTS  OF  IRELAND. 

1.  Bagnall's  Slender  Description  of  Ulster,  in  1586  ;  published  in  1854. 

2.  Carew  MSS.,  Description  of  Ulster,  11.  p.  437. 

3.  Carew  MSS.,  Description  of  Ulster,  Vol.  621. 

4.  Sir  A.  Chichester's  Description  of  Ulster,    in  Calendar   of  State    Papers, 

an.  1609. 

5.  '  Dobbs     MS.     Description    of    Antrim,'     circ.    1598 ;      published     by 

Dubourdieu  in  1812. 

6.  Loughfoyle  in  1601  ;  published  in  Ulster  Journal  of  Archaeology. 

7.  '  Perambulation  of  Leinster  in  1596,'  in  Calendar  of  Carew  MSS. 

8.  '  Counties  of  the  Pale,'  Ussher  MSS.  E.  4  33. 

9.  Barony  of  Forth,  printed  in  the  Kilkenny  Journal  of  Archaeology. 

10.  Composition  of  Connaught  in    1585   in   Hardiman's    Iar-Connacht   and 

O'Donovan's  Hy-Many  and  Hy-Fiachrach. 

11.  Description  of  Connaught  in  1612,  printed  in  Archaeologia  Vol.  27. 

12.  Description  of  Clare,  MSS.    E.    2.    14.,  Trinity  College,  printed  in  this 

book. 

13.  O'Flaherty's    Chorographical    Description    of    Iar-Connacht    in     1684, 

published  by  Hardiman. 

14.  O'Roddy's  Description  of  Leitrim,  MS.  T.C.D. 

15.  Ordnance  Survey  MSS.,  in  Royal  Irish  Academy. 

16.  Old  Maps — the  first  in  1567;  the  second  in   1571  for  the  Government; 

Nowel's;   Jobson's  Ulster  in  1590;  Janson's  ;  Speed's;  Maps  of  the 
Escheated  Counties  in  1609  ;  Maps  in  the  Pacata  Hibemia. 


Xll. 


The  notes  have  been  taken  from  the  foregoing  Descriptions,  from  the  publica- 
tions of  the  Irish  Archaeological  Society's,  the  Kilkenny  Journal  of  Archaeology, 
the  Ulster  Journal  of  Archaeology,  the  Life  and  Letters  of  McCarthy  Mor,  the 
Calendars  of  the  Carew  Manuscripts,  and  other  Calendars.  The  Calendar  of  the 
Carew  MSS.  from  year  1589  to  1600  is  meant  by  the  reference  Car.  Cal,  which  is 
so  frequently  repeated.  I  have  also  ransacked  the  various  County  Histories  and 
Statistical  Surveys,  the  Topographical  Dictionaries  of  Seward  and  Lewis,  and  the 
Parliamentary  Gazetteer  of  Ireland,  the  Annals  of  the  Four  Masters.,  and  the 
Historia  Catholica  of  O'Sullevan  Beare. 

The  gentlemen,  who  preside  over  the  libraries  of  The  Royal  Irish 
Academy,  of  The  Royal  Dublin  Society,  and  Trinity  College,  gave  me  every 
facility  for  examining  the  treasures  which  are  under  their  care.  To  them  and  to 
the  gentlemen  of  the  Record  Office  I  beg  to  tender  my  best  thanks. 


THE  DESCRIPTION  OF  IRELAND 

AND  THE  STATE  THEREOF,  AS  IT  IS  AT  THIS  PRESENT 

IN  ANNO  1598. 


IRELAND  containeth  in  length  from  the  old  head  of  Kinsale 
in  the  South  (which  is  West  and  to  North  from  St.  Michel's 
mount  in  Cornwall)  unto  Ramshead  Hand  in  the  North  of 
Ulster,  which  is  from  Loghryan  in  Scotland,  about  260  Miles  ; 
and  in  Breadth  from  Hoth,  near  Dublin,  which  is  East,  to 
Crosfhe  Patrick  in  Maio  Westward,  120  Miles. a  There  are  in 
Ireland,  according  to  the  old  number  of  their  division  of  Lands, 
6814  Town  Lands;  in  Leinster,  1930;  in  Munster,  2200;  in 
Connaught,  1600;  in  Meath,  84;  in  Ulster,  1000. 

Every  Town  containeth  Eight  Plowlands  arable,  besides 
pasture  for  300  Kyne ;  the  Sume  of  the  arable  Plowlands  is 
54,512,  besides  Woods,  Marshes,  moores,  pastures  and  Hills. 
Every  Plowland  containeth  1 20  Acres,  every  Acre  is  in  Breadth 
4  Roodes  or  Perches,  in  Length  40  Perches,  and  every  Rood 
21  Foot,  so  the  Irish  Acre  exceedeth  the  English  Acre  by  5/8. 
If  Ireland  were  re-formed,  it  might  yield  every  year  of  common 

*  'Irelande  lieth  a-toofe  in  the  West  least  breadths  are  174  and  in  miles.' 

Ocean  ;  in  proportion  it  resembleth  an  — Thorn's  Directory. 
egge,  blunt  and  plaine  on  the  sides,  not  '  From  the  South  forelande   to  the 

reaching  forth  to  sea,   in  nookes  and  northe  pointe  called   Thorach,   about 

elbowes  of  land,  as  Brittaine  doth.'- —  300   myles;    and    in    breadthe    from 

Campion.  Dublin  to  St.  Patrick's  mounte  and  the 

'  Its  shape  is  that  of  a  rhomboid,  the  sea   beating   alongst   Connaught,    140 

great  diagonal  of  which  is  302  miles,  miles  Irish,  which  are  somewhat  larger 

and  the  less  210  miles  ;  its  greatest  and  than  our  Englishe  myles.' — Dymmok. 


2  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Subsidies  upon  every  Plowland  viJ-  viij^-,  which  would  amount 
yearly  to  18,170'-  13^  iiij*,  besides  Customs  of  Havens,  Ports, 
and  offices,  which  was  in  old  time  20,000  marks  yearly,  besides 
the  Inheritance  of  the  Crowne ;  that  was,  in  Ulster,  32,000 
marks  and  an  half;  in  Connaught,  28,000  marks  xs-  vj^  ;  in 
Meath,  18,000  marks,  besides  Munster  and  Leinster,  and 
besides  all  advowsons  of  Churches,  Wards,  Marriages,  Reliefs 
and  Escheats,  first  fruits,  xx  parts,  imposts,  and  other  Casualties. 
Ireland  is  Divided  into  five  parts  or  provinces  :  Ulster, 
Meath,b  Munster,  Leinster,  and  Connaught.0  The  province  of 
Ulster  lyeth  in  the  furthest  part  North  of  the  Realm.  It  is 
divided  from  Meath  with  the  River  Boyne  on  the  South-east 
part,  and  with  the  Breyine,  which  is  called  Omeliesd  Country,  on 
the  South,  and  on  the  South-west  it  boundeth  upon  Connaught, 
namely,  upon  the  County  of  Leytrim  and  the  County  of  Sligo ; 
the  rest  is  altogether  invironed  with  the  Sea,  and  containeth  in 
it  Nine  Counties",  three  of  Antient  and  old  making,  and  six  new 
made,  the  names  whereof  are  these  : 

Louth,      \ 

Doune,     >   Old  Counties. 

Antrim,    J 

Armagh,         Tyrone,         Fermanagh,  )       New 

Monaghan,     Coleraine,     Donegall,       ;  Counties. 

b  '  Meathe,  so  called,  as  lying  in  the         e  '  Some  attribute  the  co.  of  Cavan  for 

midst  of  the  country,  and  composed  of  a  tenth.' — Dymmok.     '  The  Irish  forces 

a  part  of  every  province ;  or  else  for  of  these  counties  were  1 702  horse  and 

that   it   conteyneth   but    18    cantreds,  7220  foote.' — Moryson.    'The  places  of 

whereas  the  others  contain  34  or  35  a  strengths  and  fastnesses  in  Ulster  are  the 

piece.' — Dymmok.  woodds  and  boggs  of  Clanbrasselogh, 

c  '  The  insurgents  of  all  Ireland  in  Clancane  in  the  co.  of  Armagh,  and  the 

1599  amounted  to   18,368  foote   and  woodds  and  boggs  of  Killulto,  Kilwarlin, 

2346  horse.' — Moryson.  Killoutry,  and  south  Clandeboye,  in  ye 

d  '  O'Relye's  countrey.' — Bagnall.  co.  of  Downe.' — Dymmok,  p.  26. 


COUNTY  OF  LOUTH. 


THE    COUNTY   OF    LOUTHE. 

The  Countie  of  Louth  containeth  all  the  Land  by  the  Sea 
coast,  from  the  River  of  the  Boyne  by  Drogheda  to  the  Haven 
of  Carlingford  on  the  East,  and  it  hath  the  Countie  of  Meath  to 
the  South,  and  South-west  the  barbarous  Countries  of  the  Fewes, 
part  of  the  County  of  Armagh  to  the  North,  and  the  Countrie 
of  Feony,  part  of  the  same  County  to  the  West,  by  means 
whereof  it  is  exposed  to  the  incursions  of  the  rude  people 
inhabiting  these  Countries/  who  in  times  past  kept  a  great  part 
of  this  Countrie  lying  next  them  wast ;  but  of  late  years  Tyrone 
and  his  adherents  hath  made  the  whole  Countie  desolate,  that  it 
might  not  yield  to  the  English  Armie,  whensoever  it  should 
invade  him,  any  succour  or  relief,  either  of  men,  or  Victuals  for 
men  or  Horses,  or  any  convenient  place  for  soldiers  to  garrison 
in,  now  againe  re-inhabitted. 

It  is  part  of  the  English  paile,  and  beareth  contribution  with 
the  rest  of  the  English  countries. 

Townes  incorporat  \  Drogheda,  standing  upon  the  Boyne,  2 
in  the  Countie  of  [  Miles  from  the  Sea,  with  a  barred  Haven 
Louth  are  these,  ^  very  dangerous  to  enter  in,  governed  by 
and  walled  :  )      a  Mair  and  2  Sheriffes. 

Dundalk,       )  Both  Sea  Townes,  and  walled, 
Carlingford, )      but  barred  ;  Ardee,  a  drie 
Towne    within  the    Land 
westward,  walled. 

f '  It  hath  the  most  dangerous  bor-  Monaghan,  upon  the  O'Neiles  of  the 
derers  and  neighbors  of  any  county ;  Teenes,  and  the  O'Hanlons  of  Armagh.' 
for   it    lyeth   on   the    MacMahons    of     —Dymmok.     Feony  should  be  Ferny. 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  Lords  Spiritual. — The  Primate  Armagh,  his  chief  Hous 
and  Seat  at  Armagh  ;  but  he  hath  much  Lande  in 
this  Countie,  and  at  this  time  his  whole  Residence 
is  in  Drogheda  or  thereabout. 

Lords  Temporall. — The  Lord  of  Louth,  whose  surname  is 
Plunket,  his  chief  Hous  is  Louth. 

Knights. — Sir  Gerrot  Moore,  his  chief  Hous  is  Millefont. 

Sir  Chyver  [Christofer]  Bedlow,  his  Hous  is  called 
of  himself  Bedlowstoune. 

Sir  Nico.  Bagnell,  the  Father,  and  Sir  Henrie,  his 
Sone,  both  Knight  Marshalls  of  Ireland,  had  much 
possessions  in  this  Countie,  and  sometimes  had  their 
residence  at  Carlingford,  where  Sir  Henry  was  borne 
[but  for  many  years  they  have  resided  at  the  Newrie, 
the  L.  whereof  is  now  called  Arthure  Bagnell,  an 
idiot.] 

"j       Plunketts, 
Brandons, 
Taffes, 
Cashells, 
Barnwalls, 
Verdons, 


Gentlemen8  of  better 
and  meaner  sort 
are  these : 


Dartoyes, 

Bedlowes, 

Garlands, 

Warrens, 

Clintons, 

Moores, 

Dowdals. 


g  We  have  here  forty  names.  We 
find  only  twenty-five  in  the  Perambula- 
tion of  the  Pale,  which,  however,  gives 
fourteen  additional  names  :  '  Tath  (sic, 
but  it  should  be  Taaffe),  of  Clintons- 
town  ;  Tath  of  Cookstown  ;  Tath  of 
Stevinstown ;  Tath  of  Rathclare ;  Dow- 
dal  of  Glassepestell;  Clinton  of  Drum- 
cashell ;  Plunket  of  Nuehowse  :  Gernon 


of  Gernonstown;  Gernon  of  Donmogh- 
an;  Babe  of  Derver  ;  Stanley  of  Merlins- 
town  ;  Warren  of  Warrenstown ;  Barn  wall 
of  Rathesker;  Talbot  of  Castlering; 
Rice  Ap  Hugh,  Provost  Marshal  of  the 
Ardye.'  It  also  informs  us  that  Fleming 
lived  at  Crowmerton,  and  that  Verdon  of 
Clonmore  was  '  descended  of  Theobald 
Verdon,  High  Constable  of  Ireland.' 


COUNTY  OF  LOUTH. 


Of  Plunketts  in  this  Countie  are — 
Plunket  of  Bewlie. 
Plunket  of  Correstone. 

Other  Gentlemen. 
Dowdall  of  Newton.  Cashells, 

Taffe  of  Ballibrayen. 
Drake  of  Drakeston. 
Peppard  of  Ardy. 
Bath  of  Raferghe. 
Clinton  of  Clintonstoune. 
Dromgold  of  Dromgoldstoune. 
Wotton  of  Rochestoune. 
Garland  of  Bothnan. 
Garlond  of  Garlondstonne. 
Verdon  of  Clonmor[vel  Clonnor]  Worrall 
Allen  of  Ardy.  Birrell. 


(  of  Dundalk. 
Brandons,  ' 

Sagrave  of  the  Grange. 


of  Carlingford. 


Cusack  of  Richardstoune. 
Hadsor  of  Keppock. 

h  The  Members  of  Parliament  for 
Louth  in  i56owere  Taf  de  Ballebragane 
and  Dowedal  de  Glassepistell ;  in  1582 
the  members  were  Gerlone  and  Moore. 
In  this  county  there  are  of  the  Queen's 
troops,  350  foote  at  Dundalk.  under 
Egerton,  Bisset,  and  Bingley ;  200  foote 
at  Artherdee,  under  Sir  Garret  Moore  and 
Captaine  Roe. — Moryson,  p.  43.  The 
garrison  of  Drogheda  in  1595  consisted 
of  1 20  footmen  of  Sir  H.  Norris,  60  f.  of 
Captain  Wingfield,  and  60  f.  of  Captain 
Brett. — Calendar  of  CarewMSS.  Cap- 
tain Brett  was  probably  of  the  Louth 
family  mentioned  in  the  text.  '  Fleming' 
was  Captain  Garret  Fleming,  at  whose 


Dowdon  of  Dowdonstonne. 

Merriman, 

Butler, 

Hurlestone  of  Killany. 

Garlond  of  Killoncowle. 

Brett.  Car. 

Fleming.  Cooke. 

Sherlock. 

Nugent. 
Chamberlayne.   Barnwall. 
White.h 

castle  the  truce  was  concluded  between 
the  commissioners  of  Tyrone  and  Essex, 
on  the  8th  Sept.  1599. — Vide  Carew 
Calendar.  He  was  the  grandson  of  Sir 
Garret  Fleming,  Marshal  of  Ireland,  and 
was  the  father  of  the  celebrated  Fran- 
ciscan, F.  Fleming,  who  was  born  in 
1 5  99,  at  Belatha  Lagain,  in  Louth. — Vide 
Ulster  Jour,  of  Arch.,  No.  8,  p.  254. 
Only  three  of  these  names  are  now  to  be 
found  among  the  magistrates  or  among 
the  'County  Families'  of  Louth,  viz., 
Lords  Louth  and  Bellew,  and  Mr.  Taaffe 
of  Smarmore  Castle. — See  Thorn's  Di- 
rectory, and  Watford's  County  Families. 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  DOUNE. 

This  shyre  contayneth  all  the  Countries  between  the  Haven 
of  Carlingford  and  the  Borrya  of  Knockfergus,  viz. : — 

The  Toppb  of  the  Newrie. 

The  Toppb  of  Mourney. 

Evaghe,  otherwise  called  McGennes'c  Country. 

Kilulto.  lecahell. 

Kiwarlen.  Duffrin. 

Kinalewarten.  little  Ardes  and  great  Ardes. 

South  Clandeboye. 

Clonbrassell  Mcyoolechan.d 

The  Topps  of  Newrie  and  Mourne  are  the  Inheritance  of 
the  H eyres  of  Sr  Nich.  Bagnoll,  who  at  his  first  coming  hither 
found  them  altogether  Wast,  and  Shane  O'Neall  dwelling  within 
less  than  a  Mile  to  the  Newrie,  at  a  place  called  feidem. 
Suffering  no  subject  to  Travel  from  Dundalk  Northwards,  but 
Sithence  the  Buildings  and  Fortifications  made  there  by  the 
said  Sr  Nicolas,  all  the  Passages  were  made  free,  and  much 
of  the  Countrie  next  adjacent  reduced  to  reasonable  tributs 
[civilitie],  till  this  late  Rebellion  of  Tyrone  hath  stopped  againe 
all  the  said  Passages,  and  layed  the  Countrie  in  a  manner  Wast, 
as  it  was  in  the  said  tyme  of  Shane  O'Neall,  ebut  since  the  King's 
tyme  returned  to  the  former  State.c 

a  '  The  Bay  of  Knockfergus.' — Dobbs  d  Written  M'Boolechan  further  on ; 

and  Dymmok.  but  McCoolechan  in  Dobbs,  and  McGoo- 

b  A  curious  mistake  for  Lopp,   i.e.,  lechan  in   Bagnall.     It   is   MacDuile- 

'  Lordshipp,'asitis  in  Dobbs and  Bagnall.  chain  in  Irish  ;  perhaps  it  is  the  present 

c  '  All Maginnes' country'  is  in  Dobbs;  northern  name  of  Dullagan? 

but  it  is  a  mistake  for  called,  which  is  in  '  The  words  from  e  to  *  are  not  in 

the  Betagh  and  Bagnall  MSS.  Dobbs. 


COUNTY  OF  DOWN.  7 

In  this  Countrie  are  few  Gentlemen  of  name,  the  whole 
Inhabitants  being  Tenants  to  latef  Sr  Henrie  Bagnoll. 

Eveaghe  [Evaghe],  otherwise  called  McGennes  Countrie, 
was  lately  governed  by  Sf  Hugh  McGenne,  gand  now  by  his 
Sone,  Sr  Arthure  McGennes,g  the  civilest  of  all  the  Irish  in  these 
parts.  He  was  brought  of  by  Sir  Nicholas  Bagnoll  from  the 
Bonnoght  h[paying  of  meal,  butter,  and  some  money  for  paying 
of  O'Neall's  soldiers]11  of  the  O'Neall's,  to  contribute  to  the 
Prince  [Queene],  to  whome  he  did  paie  an  Anual  Rent  for  his 
Lands,  which  he  took  by  Letters  patents  to  hold  after  the 
Inglishe  manner,  for  him  and  his  Heyres  males ;'  So  as  in  this 
place  onlyk  of  Ulster  the  rude  custome  of  Thanistship1  was  taken 
away.  But  this  old  Knight  being  dead,  his  Sone  that  succeeded 
being  a  young  Man,  hath  ioyned  himself  with  Tyrone,  his 
Brother-in-law  m[for  Tyrone  hath  to  his  Wife  the  sister  of  this 
McGennes],m  and  thereby  hath  cast  away  his  Father's  civilitie, 
and  returned  to  the  rudeness  of  the  country.  McGennes  is  able 
to  make  four  Score  Horsemen  and  near  200  Footmen."  °Of 
late  he  hath  carried  himself  well,  and  admitted  Freeholders  in 
his  Country  by  advice  of  the  State." 

Kilulto  is  a  very  fast  Countrie,  full  of  Wood  and  Boggs. 
It  bordereth  upon  Lough  Evaghe  and  Clonbrassell ;  the  Capten 
thereof  was  one  Cormack  McNeal,  who  likewise  was  brought  by 

'  This  word  is  not  in  Dobbs.  Lord  Burghley  inserted  '  amongest  the 

Bh  The  words  from  s  to  s,  h  to  h,  are  I"shry-' 
not  in  Dobbs.  \  This  word  1S  misspelled  '  Thorn 

ship'  in  Dymmok. 

'  '  He  lyeth  very  cyvilly  and  Enghshe  „,  FrQm  »  to  ™  is  a  marginai  note  in 

like  in  Ins  house,  and  every  festival  day  Qur  Mg_  .  b  DMs  it  is  in  parenthesis. 
weareth   Enghshe   garmentes  amongst  „  Re  had  6lQ  f  and  I2Q  h_  in  15g2 

his  own  followers.'— Bagnatl.  -Carew  Calendar. 

k  After    '  only'  in    the   Bagnal  MS.  °  From  °  to  °  is  not  in  Dobbs. 


8  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Sr  Nich.  Bagnoll  from  the  Bonnaghtsp  of  O'Neall's  to  yield  to 
the  Prence  [Ouene],  but  at  this  present  the  captaine  thereof  is 
Bryan  McArt,  Brother's  Son  to  the  Earl  of  Tyrone.  He  is  able 
to  make  30  Horsmenq  and  180  Shot  and  Kearne.  r[The 
Kearnes'  arms  are  swords,  tergats,  and  darts. ]r  This  countrie, 
before  the  barons'  Warrs  in  Ingland,  was  possessed  and  Inhabit- 
ted  by  Inglishmen,  and  there  doeth  yet  remain  an  old  defaced 
Castle,  which  still  beareth  the  name  of  one  Sr*  Miles  Tracie. 

Kilwarten,5  Bounding  upon  Kilulto,  is  a  verie  fast  Wood- 
land ;  the  Captain  thereof  was  one  McRorie,'  and  sometymes  did 
contribute  and  yield  to  Clandeboy,  and  after  reduced  to  have 
dependance  upon  the  Quene ;  But  of  late  the  Earl  of  Tyrone 
hath  given  this  Countrie  to  one  of  his  Coosons,  named  Owen 
McHughe:  this  Countrie  is  able  to  make  xx  Horsemen  and 
aboute  100  Footmen. 

Kinalewarten,  otherwise  called  McCartie  [forsan  McCartan]u 
Countrie,  is  likewise  a  Woodland  and  Boggie.  It  Lyeth  between 
Kilwarton  and  Lechaell,  the  Capten  thereof  is  called  Acholie 
McCartan,  and  did  yield  to  the  Ouene,  but  lately  adherred  to  the 
Earl  of  Tyrone,  as  one  of  O'Neall's  vassals.  It  is  able  to  make 
260  Footmen,  but  few  or  no  Horsemen,  by  reason  that  the 
Country  is  so  full  of  Woods  and  Boggs.v 

p  '  From  the  bondage  of  the  O'Neils.'  Bagnall,  and  Kihvartin  in  the  index  to 

— Bagnall;  but  it  should  be  bonnaght,  the  Carew  Calendar. 
as  in  our  MS.  and  in  Dobbs.  «  By  sirname  is  M'Genis  called  Ever 

"'Twenty   h.    and    160    foote   and  McRorie.—£at>nall. 
Kerne.' — Dobbs.     The  Carew  Calendar  „.     ,       .  ,.r,,     , 

.►„*«.  A-k  b  MclJ  ..       r         "    Kincleartie,      or     McCarthaneys 

states  that  Bryan  McArt  was  captain  of  „  ,„,',,  „         „    / 

„„„    f„„ f     ,  '  .      ,      a  „    ...  Country' — Dobbs;     but     Bagnall    has 

300    loot,    'trained    after   ye    English  ._  _     }  " 

1VT c (   1  T" t n  n 

manner,  besides  rascals  and  Kerne.' 

'  From  "  to  r  is  not  in  Dobbs.  "  McArtan  and  the  Sleaght  McNeill 

s  Rede  Kilwarlin,  as  in  Dobbs   and  hath  100  f.  and  20  h.  in  1599. —  Carciv 

Bagnall ;  yet  also  written  Kilwaren  in  Calendar. 


COUNTY  OF  DOWN.  9 

Clonebrassell  McBoolechan  (so  called  for  difference  be- 
tween this  and  another  Countrie  of  the  same  name  in  the  Countie 
of  Armagh),  is  a  verie  vast  Countrie  of  Wood  and  Bogg, 
Inhabitted  with  a  sept  called  the  0'Rellies,a  verie  Savage  and 
Barbarous  people,  given  altogether  to  Spoiles  and  Robberies. 
They  contribute,  but  of  their  own  pleasure,  to  the  capten  of 
Glandeboy,  bbut  were  lately  followers  to  Tyrone.b  They  can 
make  few  Horsemen  and  160  Kearne  and  Shott. 

Lechaell  is,  cfor  most  part,c  the  Inheritance  of  dthe  Earls  of 
Kildare,d  the  abbey  Lands  whereof  were  given  to  Gerrot,  Earle 
of  Kildare,  and  his  wife  and  the  heyres  Males  of  his  Bodie,  by 
Queen  Marie  at  their  Marriage,  and  the  Earl's  restitution  to  his 
Blood  and  Lands,  in  place  of  some  of  his  livings  given  away  to 
others  by  patent  by  King  Henrie  the  8th  in  the  tyme  of  his 
attainder.  "Btit  by  reason  the  Heyres  Males  are  now  all  extinct, 
the  King  gave  these  lands  to  the  late  Earl  of  Devonshire,  and  he 
disposed  of  them  to  the  late  L.  Cromwell,  whose  heyres  now  enioy 
them."  f[These  lines  (in  italics)  from  being  a  note  in  the  margin, 
hath  crept  into  the  text.]f  It  is  almost  an  Hand,  and  no  trees  in 
it ;  in  it  is  the  Bishop's  seat  called  Downe.  First  built  and 
Inhabitted  by  one  Sr  John  Coursey,  who  brought  with  him 
sundrie  Inglish  Gentlemen  and  planted  them  in  this  Countrie, 
where  some  of  their  posteritie  yet  remaine  ;g  their  names  are — 

Savages.  Audlies. 

Russells.  Jordans. 

Fitzsimons.  Bensons. 

a  '  The  Kellies  greatly  affected  to  the  not  in  Dobbs  ;  from  '  to  f  is  a  marginal 

Scott,  whom  they  often  draw  into  their  note. 

countries  for  the  spoilinge  of  the  sub-  s  '  Where  some  of  them  yet  remayne, 

jects.' — Bagnall.      'The    O'Rellies.' —  though  somewhate  degenerate  and  in 

Dobbs.  poore  estate ;  yet  they  hold  still  their 

hci'{  From  b  to  b,  c~c,  A~A,  e_e,  f_f,  is  freeholdes.' — Bagnall.      '  I  assure  your 

B 


IO  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

ihThis  Country  of  Lecahell,  before  it  was  spoyled  by  the 
Rebells,  yielded  yearly  to  the  Earl  of  Kildare  8oo&  ster.  in  Rent, 
besides  much  Service  and  many  other  duties.h 

Duffryn,  sometimes  the  Inheritance  of  the  Mandevills,  and 
now  appertayning  unto  one  Whyte,  Gent.,1  who,  by  reason 
of  his  residence  in  the  pale,  cou'd  not  defend  same  in  the  late 
Rebellion.  jIt  is  now  come  to  be  held  by  Lease  by  Mr.  James 
Hamilton.3  This  Countrie  is  for  the  most  part  Woodie,  and 
lieth  upon  the  Lough  called  lough  coyne,  which  issues  into  the 
Sea  at  the  Haven  of  Stran^ford  ;  this  louo-h  is  farr  navigable 
within  the  Land,  wherein  are  divers  Isles,  and  in  some  of  them 
Strong  Castles.  This  Countrie  is  able  to  make  120  Footmen 
and  20  Horsemen. 

Litle  Ardes  lyeth  on  the  North  side  of  the  River  of 
Strangford  kby  the  Sea,k  a  fertile  Champion  Countrie.  'The 
Inhabitants  are  an  old  colonie  of  the  English.1  It  is  die  Inherit- 
ance of  the  Lord  Savage,  who,  being  not  able  to  withstand  the 
violence  of  the  O'Neals,  was  constreyned  to  take  what  they  will 
give  him.  There  are  besides  dwelling  here  certen  ancient 
Freeholders  of  the  Savages  and  Smithes,  able  to  make  amongst 
them  all  30  Horsemen  and  60  Footmen,  but  of  late  being 
spoiled  by  their  Neighbours,  some  were  compelled  to  remove, 

Lordship  I  have  been  in  many  places  therefore  it  is  usurped  and  inhabited 

and  countries  in  my  days,  and  yet  did  by    the    neighbours.' — Dobbs.     '  It    is 

I  never  see  for  so  much  a  pleasanter  usurped  by  a  bastard  sorte  of  Scotts, 

plott  of  grounde  than  the  sayd  Lecayll,  who  yield  to  White  some  small  rent  at 

for   the  commoditie  of  the  land   and  their  pleasure.     There  are  of  those  bas- 

divers  islands  in  the  same,  environed  tard  Scottes  dwelling  here  some  60  bow- 

with  the  sea.' — Lord  Grey   the  Deputy  men  and  20  shott,  which  live  most  upon 

in  1539,  quoted  in  note  to  Bagnall  MS.  the  praie  and  spoil  of  their  neighbours.' 

h  From  h  to  h  is  not  in  Dobbs.  — Bagnall. 

'  '  A  mean  gentleman,  who  is  not  of  jkl  From  '  to  j,  k  to  k,  and  '  to  ',  is  not 

power  sufficient  to  defend  the  same ;  in  Dobbs  or  Bagnall. 


COUNTY  OF  DOWN. 


I  I 


some  others,  that  knew  not  whither  to  go,  "continued  there  to 
this  daie.m 

Great  Ardes  is  almost  an  Hand,  a  Champion,  and  fertile 
Land,  and  now  possessed  by  Sf  Hugh  Montgomery  and  Mr. 
James  Hamilton.  But  the  Ancient  dwellers  there  are  the 
n[  .  .  ],  a  rich  and  strong  Sept  of  people,  always  followers  of 
the  O'Neall's  of  Clandeboy.  The  force  of  the  Inhabitants  now 
dwelling  there  is  small,  the  "same  being  yet  a  Beginning  of  a 
Plantation  from0  [...]. 

South  Clandeboye  is  for  the  most  part  a  Woodland,  and 
reacheth  from  the  Duffrin  to  the  river  of  Knockfergus  ;p  the 
Capten  of  this  was  Con  0'Neal,q  his  chief  Hous  is  called 
Castlereagh.  This  Countrie  was  able  to  make  40  Horsemen 
and  80  Footmen,  "but  the  late  Rebellion  hath  consumed  them 
all/ 


m  'They  are  often  harrowed  and 
spoiled  by  them  of  Clandeboy,  with 
whom  the  borders  of  their  lands  do 
joine.' — Bagnall.  Dobbs  says,  'not 
knowing  what  to  do,  they  have  joined 
themselves  to  the  enemy.'  From  ra 
to  m  is  not  in  Dobbs  or  Bagnall. 

"  '  The  Ogilmers,  a  rich,  &c.  The 
land  is  now  possessed  by  Sir  Con  Mac- 
Neil  Oige,  who  hath  planted  there  Neil 
McBryan  Ferto  with  sondrey  of  his  owne 
sirname.  The  force  of  the  inhabitants 
now  dwellinge  there  is  60  horsemen  and 
300  footemen.' — Bagnall. 

0  From  °  to  °  is  not  in  Dobbs. 

p  '  The  river  of  Knockfergus,  Kilulto, 
lyinge  upon  Lough  Eaghe  and  Clan- 
braselo.' — Dymmok. 


q  'NialMcBryan  Flain.'— Dobbs.  'Sir 
Con  McNeil  Oige  O'Nele,  who  in  the 
time  that  th'  Erie  of  Essex  attempted 
this  country  was  prisoner  in  the  castle 
of  Dublin,  together  with  his  nephewe, 
Hugh  McPhelim,  Capten  of  North 
Clandeboye,  by  mean  whereof  Sir  Brian 
McPhelim,  younger  brother  to  Hugh, 
did  then  possess  both  countries.  The 
Southe  parte  is  able  to  make  40  horse- 
men and  80  footemen.' — Bagnall. 

'  The  Dobbs  MS.  has  not  these  re- 
markable and  significant  words  from '  to 
'.  In  1598  the  Lords  of  Upper  and 
Lower  Clannaboy  had  120  h.  and  300  f. ; 
and  in  1599  Neil  M'Bryan  Fertagh, 
Lord  of  Upper  Clannaboy,  had  80  f. 
and  50  horse  in  the  service  of  Hugh 
O'Neil. — Carcw  Calendar. 


12 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Tounes  in  the  Countie 
of  Doune  are — 


!The  Newrie,! 
Downe,  and 
Arglas. 


All  unwalled,  and  with- 
out any  priviledges  of 
a  Corporation. 


Castles    in 
Countie — 


1  •  ,  /  Green  Castle,  'belonging  to  the  Queene,' 

<      near  the  barr  of  Carlingford,  upon  the 
[      Sea. 

Dundrum,  "belonging  to  the  Earl  of  Kildare,"  in  the  Bottom 
of  the  Bay,  that  divideth  lecahell  from  Evaghe.     The  Castle  of 
the  narrow  Water  which  kepeth  the  River  that  goeth  to  the 
Newire,  passable. 
Stranyford. 
Ranechadie,  ) 
Scatterig,       ) 
Castlereaghe,  in  the  Great  Ardes.v 
This  Countrie  hath  the  Sea  to  the   East,  the   Countie  of 
Armagh  to  the  West,  the  Haven  of  Carlingford  and  that  river 
to  the  South,  the  Countries  of  Brasilagh,  Clancan,  and  Lough 
Eaghe  to  the  North. 


within  the  lies  of  Lough  Coyne. 


■  At  the  Newrie  in  1599  there  were 
50  h.  under  Sir  S.  Bagnoll,  and  950  f. 
under  Bagnoll,  Blayney,  Bodley,  Freckle- 
ton,  Tobias  Caufield,  Stafford,  and 
Leigh.' — Moryson. 

•From  '  to  ',  and  u  to  u  is  not  in  Dobbs, 
ntfs  there  anything  about  the  towns 
ano^astles  in  B agnail. 

u  'Doundrome,  one  of  the  strongest 
holts  that  ever  I  saw  in  Ireland,  and 
most  commodious  for  the  defence  of 
the  whole  country  of  Lecayll,  both  by 
sea  and  land.' — Lord  Grey,  in  1539. 

v  By  mistake,   the  Dobbs1  MS.    has 


'  Castlereagh  in  Lough  Coyne.'  The 
Savages  of  Down  are  still  represented 
by  Col.  Andrew  Nugent,  of  Portaferry, 
of  the  Scots  Greys,  the  old  name  of 
whose  family  was  Savage.  The  Russels 
are  represented  by  Mr.  Russell,  pro- 
prietor of  Quoniamstown,  near  Down 
Patrick,  in  whose  family  the  property 
has  remained  for  six  centuries,  and  by 
C.  Russell,  Esq.,  of  Killough.  The 
Whytes  are  represented  by  J.  J.  Whyte, 
Esq.,  of  Loughbrickland,  J. P.  &  D.L., 
of  the  Co.  of  Down. 


COUNTY  OF  ANTRIM. 


THE  COUNTY  OF  ANTRIM. 

The  Countie  of  Antrim  stretcheth  from  the  River  of  Craig;- 
fergus  to  the  Rivera  of  the  Bann,  and  containeth  these  Countries : — 

North  Clandeboy. 

Hand  magie,  Bryan  Carroghes  Countrie. 

The  Glynnes, 

the  rout. 

North  Clandeboy  is  for  the  most  part  a  plain  Country, 
being  in  length  from  the  River  of  Belfast  and  Craigfergus  to  the 
Rout,  and  in  bredth  from  the  Glynnes  to  the  great  Lough  called 
Eaghe,  otherwise  called  Lough  Sidney.  This  Land  was  given 
by  the  Ouene  by  Letters  Patents  to  S;  Bryan  McPhelim's  Sones, 
notwithstanding  by  a  division  made  by  S:  John  Perrott  the  one 
moyetie  thereof  was  allotted  to  Hugh  McPhelim's  Sones,  whereby 
great  dissention  fell  out  between  them,  and  several  Slaughters 
on  both  parts  hath  been  committed.  b[But  Shane  McBrian 
possesses  some  part  thereof  at  this  day  ;  the  rest  for  the  most 
was  given  by  the  h.  L.  Sir  Arthure  Chicester  to  the  L.  Dep.Jb 
The  principall  of  all  wasc  in  this  Countrie  were  these : — the 
Mc 

a  '  To  the  goinge  out  of  the  Bann.' —  could  not  make  out  the  names  in  the 

B agnail.  copy  which   he   had.     The  varia/itcs, 

b  From   b  to  b  is   a  marginal   note,  '  Tartur '  and  '  Bertier,'  and  '  the  prin- 

and  is  not  in  Dobbs.  cipal  followers'  and  '  the  principal  of  all 

c  '  The    principal   followers   in    this  was,'  are  very  remarkable ;  the  latter 

countrey    are    these  :  —  the     McGies,  seems  to  be  due  to  a  lapsus  lingua;. 

M'Onulles,  Onulchalons,  Durnam,  and  Dymmok  says,  '  North  Clandeboy  is 

Tarturs.' — B agnail;   but,  according  to  divided  into  two   partes,  the  river  of 

Dobbs,    they    were     MacYnes,     Mac-  Kellis  being  the  mear  bounde.     The 

Quillens,     Ownilechabees,     Dawmans,  south   parte  thereof  was   geven  for  a 

and  Bertiers.'     The  writer  of  our  MS.  rent  to  the  sonnes  of  Brian  M'Phelim 


14  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

The  force  which  they  were  able  to  make  was  80  Horsmen 
and  300  Footmen,  dbut  the  most  part  in  the  last  Rebellion  killed.d 

I  LAND  MAGIE. 

I  land  magie  is  a  portion  of  Land  within  five  Miles  of  Craig- 
fergus,  almost  environed  with  the  Sea,  the  head  Land  thereof 
maketh  the  Haven  of  Olderfleet.  It  is  five  Miles  long,  but  little 
more  than  a  Mile  br  ad,  all  plaine  without  any  Wood,  very 
fertile.  It  was  given  by  the  late  Ouene  to  the  then  Erie  of 
Essex  his  Grandfather,  and  from  him  lately  purchased  by  the 
L.  Depe. 

Bryan  Carroghes  Countrie  was  a  portion  of  North  Clande- 
boy,  but  wonne  from  it  by  some  of  the  Scottish  Iryshf  of  the 
Sept  of  the  Clandonnels,  who  entered  the  same,  and  yet  do  hold 
it,  being  a  verie  strong  piece  of  Land,  lying  upon  the  North  side 
of  the  Bann.  The  name  of  the  now  Capten  thereof  is  Bryan 
Carraghe,  who  possesseth  also  another  piece  of  the  Countrie 
upon  Tyrone's  side  upon  the  Bann,  for  which  he  did  contribute 
to  the  Ouene8  and  for  the  Lande  on  the  north  Side  to  the  Lorde 
of  that  part  of  Clandeboy.  This  man,  by  reason  of  the  Fastness 
and  Strength  of  his  Countrie,  having  succour  on  each  side  of  the 

O'Neill,   who   were   all   pencioners   in  the  McGyes,  and  contribute  to  the  Lord 

Ireland  to  her  Majestie;  and  the  eldest,  of  Clandeboy,  but  doth  of  right  belong 

Shane  M'Brian,  yet  lyvinge,  was  cheefle.  to  the  Quene's  Castle  of  Carikfergus.' — 

The  north  parte  beyond  Kellis  to  the  Bagnall.     '  It  is  the  inheritance  of  the 

river   of  Bann  by  Lough    Eaugh  was  now  Erie   of  Essex.' — Dymmok.     'It 

assigned     to     the    sonnes    of     Hugh  hath  us  name  from  the  M'Gies,  it  is 

MThelim,  elder  brother  to  Sir  Bryar.,  granted  in  lease  to  one  Savage,  one  of 

whose  eldest  son  in  that  part  is  Hugh  the  Erl  of  Essex  his  men.' — Dobbs. 

Oge  McHugh.' — Dymmok.  ...  ...    ,      „  „         ,, 

&d  „         cw    d  •  •      „,,  f  A  bastard  kinde  of  Scotts.—Bog/iall 

d  From  d  to  d  is  not  m  Dobbs. 


and  Dobbs 

'He  dc 
almost  all  waste ;  such  as  be  there  be      Bagnall  and  Dobbs. 


Hand  McGye,  a  portion  of  land 
within  3  miles  of  Knockfergus.     It  is         E  He  doth  contribute  to  O'NeiL- 


COUNTY  OF  ANTRIM.  T5 

Bann,  was  so  obstinate  and  careless  as  he  never  wou'd  appear 
before  any  deputie,  huntill  this  Deputie  came  to  be  Governor  of 
CrauTferoais,h  but  vielded  what  relief  he  could  to  the  Scotch. 
His  force  in  People  is  very  small,  he  standeth  only  upon  the 
Strength  of  his  Country,  which  indeed  is  the  fastest  Ground  of 
Ireland.1 

The  glynnes  is  a  Countrie  so  called,  because  its  full  of 
rockie  and  wooddie  dales ;  it  stretcheth'  in  length  xxiv  Miles  on 
the  one  side,  being  backed  with  a  very  steepe  and  Boggie 
mountaine,  and  on  the  other  part  with  the  sea,  on  which  side 
there  are  many  Creekes  between  Rocks  and  Thicketts  where 
the  Scottish  Gallies  do  commonly  land  ;  at  either  end  are  verie 
narrow  Entries  and  passages  into  the  Countrie,  which  lieth 
directlie  opposite  to  Cantyre,  from  which  it  is  xviii'MUes  distant. 
The  Countrie  of  Glynnes  containeth  Seven  Barronies,  whereof 
the  He  of  Raghlins  is  compted  half  a  Barronie.  The  Names  of 
the  Barronies  are  these  : —  Larne. 

This  Countrie  of  the  Glynnes  was  possessed  Parke, 

by  Agnes  McConnell  of  Cantyre  ;  but  these  three 
or  four  years  past,  they  have  been  possessed  by 
S^  Randoll  McDonell,  Brother  to  S!  James 
McConnell,  who  enjoys  them  at  this  present,  and 
is   able  to  make   120   Footmen  and   16   Horse- 


Glanarme. 

Radboy.k 

Lade.1 

Carie. 

Mowberry. 


men. 


h  From  h  to  h  is  not  in  Dobbs. 

'  '  The  fasted  and  safest  ground  of 
Ireland — it  is  very  hard  to  hurt  him.' 
— Dymmok  and  Bagnall. 

'  '  It  stretcheth  from  the  haven  of 
Olderfleete  to  the  Route.' — Dymmok. 

k  Redbay  where  Randal,  now  Lord  of 
the  country,  has  his  residence. — Dobbs. 


1  Lade  is  not  in  Dobbs,  but  it  is  in 
Bagnall. 

m  ioo  f.  and  100  h.  Carav  Calendar; 
but  Dymmok  says:  :Jameo  McSurly 
Buy  and  his  two  brothers.  Neece  and 
Randol,  possessing  the  country  of 
Towany  (being  the  Route),  and  ye 
seven  Glynnes,  hath  400  f.  and  ico  h.' 


I  6  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

These  were  sometymes  the  Inheritance  of  Baron  Misset, 
from  whom  it  is  descended  to  a  Daughter,  who  was  married  to 
one  of  the  Clandonnells  in  Scotland,  by  whom  the  Scottish  now 
make  their  claime  to  the  whole,  and  did  quietlie  possess  the 
same  for  many  years,  till  not  long  agoe  being  spoiled  of  their 
Goods  they  were  whollie  banished  into  Scotland.  But  againe, 
the  Countrie,  by  Instructions  from  the  Ouene,  was  let  to  Agnes 
McConnell  and  her"  Uncle  Surleboy,  to  be  holden  from  her,"  and 
Her  Heyres  and  Successors  for  a  certen  Rent  yearly  payable. 
The  force  of  this  Countrie  is  uncertaine,  for  that  they  were 
Supplyed  as  need  required,  from  Scotland  with  what  Nombers 
they  Listed  to  call  for,  by  making  of  Fires  upon  many  Steepe 
Rockes  hanging-  over  the  Sea.  The  ancient  followers  of  this 
Countrie  are  these — Some  few  of  the  Missetts  yet  remaining, 
but  in  poor  State ;  the  Magies,"  .  .  .  McCarnocks,  and  the 
Clanalasters,  who  are  by  Original  Scottish,  and  all  of  them 
are    most    desirous    to    Live   under   the  Scotch,  because  they 


Angus  McConnell,  Lord  of  Cantyre.  Bruce  formed  the  resolve  of  reconquer- 

'  His'  and  'her'  are  used  in  the  Dobbs  ing  Scotland,  and  it  was  at  Sir  Hugh 

and  Bctagh  MSS.;  but  Dymmok  writes,  Bissett's     manor     of    Glenarm,     that 

Angus  and  his,  and  says,  '  by  instruc-  Edward  Bruce  landed  with  the  victors 

tions  from  her  Majesty  it  was  divided  of  Bannockburn.     Some  of  the  family 

by  Sir  John   Perrott,  between  Angus  formed   a  Celtic  clan,   and   took    the 

McConnell,    chief  of   his   name,    and  name  of  McEoin  or  McKeon.      {Four 

Sourley  Buy,  his  uncle  bysides  in  the  Mast.    An.     1383-7,   and    O 'Donovan 

land  of  the  Route.'  Introd.  to  Topogr.  Poem). 

Margery  Bissett   married   Ian    Mdr  °  '  The    Magies,   O'Nowlanes,    Mac- 

M'Donnell,  son  of  the  Lord  of  the  Isles.  Nygells,  MacAroulbyes,  MacCarnocks, 

The  Bissets  were  originally  de  Miset ;  and  the  Clanacasters.' — Dobbs.     '  The 

they  soon  changed  their  name  to  Bissett,  MacKayes,  the  Omulrenies,  the  Mac  y 

and  adopted  Irish  customs.     It  was  in  Gilles,  the  MacAwnleys,  the  MacCar- 

Bissett's   island    of  Rathlin,    that   the  nocks,  and  the  Clanalsters.' — Bagnall. 


COUNTY  OF  ANTRIM.  I  7 

do  better  defend  them,  and  less  spoile  them  then  the    Irysh 
doth." 

The  Route  is  a  pleasant  and  fertile  Country,  being  between 
the  Glynnes  and  the  River  of  the  Bann,  and  from  Clandeboy  to 
the  Sea ;  it  was  sometime  inhabitted  with  Inglishe,  for  there 
remayneth  yet  certain  defaced  Castles  and  Monasteries  of  their 
Buildinge.  The  Captain  that  made  claime  to  it  is  calledq  [  .  .  .  ] 
the  posteritie  as  is  thought  of  Walsheman ;  but  S'  James 
McSurlie  wholy  expulsed  him  and  drove  him  to  live  in  Knock- 
fergus,  where  he  remayneth  in  a  very  poor  Estate.  The  cheif 
Hous  is  called  Dunluce,  standing  upon  a  rock  in  the  Sea  Shore, 
where  the  said  Sir  James  had  his  residence,r  and  since  his 
decease  his  Brother  Sir  Randoll  MTJonnell  has  enjoyed  it,  first 
under  pretence  of  Succession,  but  now  by  virtue  of  the  King's 
grant  to  him  and  his  heyres  for  ever  of  both  the  Rent  and 
Glynnes/  The  cheife  followers  and  Inhabitants  of  this  Country 
are  the  O  .  .  ,s  and  O'Guinnes,  who  dwell  upon  their  Lands 
and  yield  rent  and  Service  to  the  foresaid  S!  Randoll.  This 
Countrie  was  able  latelie  to  make  140  horsemen  and  300  Foote- 
men,' 

p  '  Are  lest  spent  upon,  and  better  fendeth  rather  by  maintenance  of  Tur- 

defended  than  by  the  Irish  or  English.'  loch  O'Neil,  than  by  his  own  forces.' 

Dymmok.  ,  From  ,  t0  ,  is  not  in  Dobbs      It  is 

0  '  M'Guillim.'— Bagn.      <  M'Guillin.'  strange  that  BagmU  does  not  mention 

— Dobbs,      '  M<Wdh.'— Dymmok.      It  Dunluce,  which  a  State  Paper  of  1584 

was,    it     appears,    a     corruption     of  declared  to  be  an  impregnable  fortress. 
M'Llewellyn.    In  1 541  the  Chief  of  the 

M'Guillins  declared  that  no  captain  of  s '  O'Furries   and    O'Quins.'— Dobbs. 

his  race  '  ever  died  in  his  bed  sith  the  '  O'Harnes  and  O'Gumes.'— Dymmok. 

first  conqueste  of  their  said  lande.'—  '  O'Haryes  and  O'Qums.'— Bagnall. 

{Council Book  An.  1541).  Bagnall  says :  '  Moryson    says,    the    Glynnes    and 

'The   Scot   hath   well   nere    expulsed  Route  had  400  f.  and  100  h.j  but  our 

McGuillin  and  driven  him  to  a  small  MS.  estimates  at  450  h.  and  156  f.,  the 

corner   near   the  Bann,  which  he  de-  forces  they  u<cre  able  to  raise. 

c 


i8 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Craigfergus"  is  the  onlie  Towne  in  this  Shyre  upon  the 
River,  three  Miles  broad  over  against  the  Towne,  walled  partlie 
with  stone,  partlie  with  Soades.  There  were  in  it  2  Wardes, 
the  one  in  the  Castle  in  the  South  end  of  the  Towne,  the  other 
in  the  Abbey  in  the  North  end  thereof;  vbut  the  Abbey  Warde 
is  taken  away.v  This  Towne  is  governed  by  a  Maior  and  Two 
Sheriffes,  and  at  this  day  there  is  not  may  freemen  of  this 
Towne.w 

Bellfast,  viii   Miles  by  the  River  from 
Craigfergus,    where   the    passage   is 
over     the     River     at     low     water. 
O  .  .  .x  near  Louofh  Eaodie. 
01derfleete.y 
Glanarne. 
Castle  marten  in  the  Route. 


Castles  Wardable 
at  this  day, 


Defaced. 


u  In  1599  the  Queen  had  at  Carrig- 
fergus  30  h.  under  Neale  McHugh,  and 
550  f.  under  Sir  A.  Chichester,  Sir  R. 
Percy,  and  Captains  Lington  and 
Norton. — Moryson. 

v  From  v  to  v  is  not  in  Dobbs. 

w  At  this  day  there  are  but  16  free- 
men of  this  towne. — Dobbs. 

"  '  Edenduffee  Carrig,  near  Lough 
Eagh. '—Dobbs.  'The  Castles  Ward- 
able  in  1586  are  Belfast,  Edenduchar 
and  Olderfleete ;  and  the  castles  de- 
faced are  these — Portmuck  in  Hand 
Magy,  Glanarne,  and  Redbaye  in  the 
Glynnes,  and  Castlemartyn  in  the 
Route. ' — Bagnall. 

In  1523  the  Earl  of  Kildare  took 
Hugh  McNeil's  castle  of  Belfast,  and 


'  burnt  24  myle  of  his  country.'  This 
Hugh  McNeil  kept  1,500  Scots,  besides 
his  own  soldiers.  In  1591  Belfast 
castle  was  almost  surrounded  by  woods, 
'  okes  and  other  wood  for  many  miles  ' 
{See  Notes  of  the  Editor  of  BagnalPs 
Description  of  Ulster  in  Ulst.  J.  of 
Arch.) 

y  On  the  narrow  peninsula  called  the 
Corran,  which  projects  into  the  bay  of 
Larne,  stands  this  castle,  once  a  place 
of  strength.  After  McDonnell  over- 
threw the  English  under  Sir  J. 
Chichester  in  the  end  of  1597,  this 
castle  was  sold  to  him  by  its  English 
commander.  In  announcing  this 
treachery  to  Elizabeth,  Ormond  calls 
it  'Alderfleet  standing  upon  the  north 


COUNTY  OF  ARMAGH.  1 9 


THE  COUNTY  OF  ARMAGH. 

This  Countie  hath  to  the  South  the  Countie  of  Louth,  the 
blackwater  to  the  North,  the  River  of  the  Newrie  to  the  East, 
and  the  Countie  of  Monaghan  to  the  West.  It  contayneth  all 
the  Land  between  the  River  of  Dundalk  and  the  black  water, 
saving  a  small  proportion  called  Cowley,3  joining  to  Carlinford, 
belonging  to  Louth.  In  it  are  those  several  Countries  compre- 
hended. 

Ornaugh,  otherwise  O'Hanlon's  Countrie. 

Clanbrassell, 

Clancane,       Mucknoe,      Oneylans, 

Clanant,        Tirriaugh,       Feues. 
Most  of  these  have  Several  Captens,  to  whom  the  Countries 
do    appertain,    but  in  time  of  Sr  John   Perrott  were  all   made 
contributories  to  the  Earle  of  Tyrone,  to  whom  they  were  subject 
in  the  latter  times. 

O'Hanlon's  Countrie  reacheth  from  the  Newrie  and  from 
Dundalk  to  Ardmaghe ;  it  is  for  the  most  part  without  Wood, 
but  full  of  Hills  and  Boggs.  It  is  able  to  make  50  Horsemen 
and  250  footemen.b 

a  '  Couray.' — Dymmok.  the  poor  gentleman  hath  utterly  undone 

b  '  Forty   h.    and    200    f.' — Bagnall.  himself  in  wrestling  with  them ;  and  his 

'  In  1598,  in  the  army  of  Hugh  O'Neil,  brother,   likewise,    an    honest,   valiant 

there   were    80   h.    and   200   f.   under  gentleman,  was  wounded  and  maimed 

O'Hanlon,    McGyniesse,     and     Bryan  in  the  service,  and  lost  and  spent  all 

McArt.' — Carew  Calendar,  p.  287.    Sir  that  ever  he  had.     .     .     The  Countrie 

H.  Sydney  informed  the   English  go-  is  large  and  long,  yet  is  waste,  altogether 

vernment  that  a  'Mr.  Chatterton  under-  without  a  house,  pile,  or  castle  left  stand- 

tooke    to    expulse    and    subdue    the  ing  in  it,  but  a  little  sorry  fort  pitched  of 

O'Hanlons    .    .    .    in  troth,  my  Lords,  sods  and  turves.' — Collins,  vol.  i.,  148. 


20  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Clonbrassell  is  a  verie  Woody  and  Boggie  Countrie  upon 
the  great  Lough  side,  called  Oaghe  or  Sidney.  It  hath  in  it  no 
Horsemen,  but  able  to  make  160  Kearnes.c 

Clancancane"1  is  a  verie  strong  Countrie,  almost  all  Wood 
and  deep  Bogg ;  it  is  invironed  on  one  side  with  the  foresaid 
great  Loughe,  and  on  the  other  side  with  a  great  Bogg,  and  two 
deep  Rivers,  the  one  called  the  Black  Water,  the  other  the 
little  Banne,  which  both  within  this  Countrie  do  fall  within  this 
Lough.  In  this  Countrie  are  no  Horsemen,  but  about  some 
150  kearne,0  who  live  for  the  most  part  in  tyme  of  peace  upon 
Stealth  and  Robberies. 

CANTAULEf  is  a  peece  of  a  Countrie,  which  of  right  apper- 
taineth  to  the  Arch- Bishop  of  Ardmagh  and  his  Freeholders,  and 
Lieth  between  Ardmagh  and  the  Blackwater.  There  is  in  it  nowg 
to  the  River  much  underwoode  and  Loughes,h  but  the  rest  lying 
towards  Ardmagh  is  champion  and  Fertile.'  The  Capten  of 
this  Countrie  was  called  Turleighe  Brasilaghe,  who  held  this 
peece  of  Land  from  the  Earle  of  Tyrone,  to  whom  he  payed  his 
Rents  and  Service.  The  said  Turloghe  and  his  Sonnes  were 
Liable  to  make  40  Horsemen  and  100  Footmen. 

Muctionoe  and  Tirriaughelie,j  between  Ardmaghe  and 
McMahon's  Countries,  not  Long  since  appertayning  to  him,  but 
of  late  possessed  by  the  Earl  of  Tyrone,  who  hath  placed  certen 
of  his  waged  followers,  that  paid  their  Rents  and  Services  only 
unto  him. 

c  McCane's  country  hath  100  f.  and  s  'nere.' — Bagnall. 

and   12  h.— Carew   Calendar,  p.    299.  ^'boggs.'— Bagnall. 

Clanbrassil  was  M'Cann's  country.  .                                                     . 

d  Called  Clancan  by  Bagnall.  '  '  UPon   Parte   of  thlS   land  f  the 

'  M'Can  in  Clancan  hath  100  f.  and  bridSe  and  fort  of  Blackwater  bullt-'- 

12  h.'— Dymmok.  BaSnalL 

f  Written  Clanant  j7//V-<7,  but  Clanawle  '  '  Muckno  and  Tireawh.' — Bagnall. 

by  Bagnall,  and  Clanowlo  by  Dymmok.  '  Muckro  and  Tragh.' — Dymmok. 


COUNTY  OF  ARMAGH.  2  I 

Fues  bordereth  upon  the  Inglish  Pale,  within  3  Miles  to 
Dundalke.  It  is  a  verie  strong  Countrie  of  Wood  and  Bogg, 
peopled  with  certen  of  the  O'Neals,  accustomed  to  live  much 
upon  the  Spoiles  of  the  Pale.k  The  Capten  hereof  is  Sir 
Turloghe  McHenrie  O'Neall,  Brother  by  the  Mother  to  the  now 
Earle  of  Tyrone,  but  no  way  affected  to  the  Earle.  For  while 
the  Earle  of  Tyrone  was  a  good  Subject,  he  overruled  the  said 
Sr  Turloghe  with  his  strength  and  Authoritie,  and  thereby  kept 
him  from  annoying  the  Pale.  But  afterward,  when  Tyrone  was 
a  Rebell,  the  said  Sr  Turloghe  rebelled  from  his  Brother  and 
came  in  to  the  L.  Burrowes,  Late  L.  Deputie,  whom  he  served 
Fathfullie  during  the  Life  of  the  said  Deputie,  after  which  he 
was  won  by  fair  promises  to  returne  from  the  Ouene  to  Tyrone, 
with  whom,  when  he  had  remained  a  certen  tyme,  he  was  com- 
mitted to  close  Prison  in  a  Castle  within  a  Loughe  upon  a 
Suspicion  of  a  Second  revolt  from  the  Earle  to  the  Quene, 
where  he  remayneth  in  cheynes  cruelly  used  for  a  long  time, 
for  whose  deliverie  divers  attempts  were  made,  but  without 
success.  At  length  he  got  his  liberty  by  force,  and  ever  since 
hath  been  a  good  Subject.  He  hath  this  Countrie  by  Letters 
Patents  from  his  Majestic  This  country  is  able  to  make  about 
Fiftie  Horsemen  and  200  Footemen.1 

Oneylane  is  likewise  a  Woodie  land,  lyeing  between  Ard- 
magh  and  Clanconcane.  This  Earle  of  Tyrone  hath  and 
claimeth  it  to  his  inheritance  ;  he  hath  placed  there  some  of  the 
O' m  and ,  who  fostered  him,  and  for  the  most  part 

k  All  that  follows,  down  to  the  end  of  who    fostered    him.' — Bagnall.       The 

the  chapter  on  Armagh,  is  not  in  the  learned  Editor  of  the  Bagnall  MS.  says 

B agnail  MS.  that '  Henry  O'Hagan  was  the  Earl's  sec- 

'  In   the   Fewes   Tirlo    M'O'Neale  retary,  and  probably  his  foster-brother.' 

hath  300  f.  and  50  h.' — Carew  Calendar.  But  the  Cal.  of  Carew  MSS.  removes 

m  '  Some  of  the  Quins  and  Hagans  all  doubt  regarding  O'Neill's  fosterers. 


22 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


he  dwelleth  himself  amongst  them  in  a  little  Hand  within  a 
small  Loughe  called  Lough  Cotos."  In  this  place  lay  his  store  of 
Munition,  his  money  and  jewels,  and  whatsoever  precious  things 
he  had,  namlie  his  Wife  and  Children. 

There  be  no  places  of  importance  in  this  Countrie,  but  the 
church  of  Ardmagh,  which  was  wont  to  Serve  for  a  Garrison 
place,  and  a  little  Fort  upon  the  Blackwater,  which  the  old 
Earle  of  Essex  first  Builded  on  the  South  side  of  the  River, 
together  with  a  Bridge  over  the  River ;  but  Tyrone  demolished 
the  Bridge  and  raysed  the  Fort,  and  builded  it  on  the  North 
side  of  the  River  to  Stopp  the  Passage  of  the  Foord,  which  the 
L.  Burrowes,  late  L.  Deputie,  surprised  in  July  1597,  and 
placed  in  it  a  Garrison  of  200  Men,  who  kept  the  same  till 
August  1598,  at  which  tyme,  after  the  overthrowe  given  the 


Under  the  year  1594,  at  p.  87,  the  Earl 
of  Tyrone  says  : — '  The  Earl's  foster- 
brothers,  Captain  Richard  and  Henry 
Hovendon,  having  the  leading  of  200  f. 
upon  the  Earl's  charges,  overthrew  500 
or  600  Spaniards  in  Tir-Connell  .  . 
but  neither  they  nor  the  Earl  had  any 
recompense  of  such  service.'  Again, 
in  the  negotiations  with  Elizabeth's 
commissioners,  Jan.  15th,  1596,  O'Neil 
says  he  cannot  give  them  full  satisfac- 
tion, because  his  secretary,  Henry  Ho- 
vendon, was  absent,  and  he  could  not 
trust  another  to  write  for  him  on  such 
matters. —  Carat'  Calendar,  an.  1596, 
pp.  133  and  136. 

"  '  In  a  little  island  called  Lough 
Coe.' — Bagnall.  Island  fastnesses  in 
inland  lakes  formed  the  universal  sys- 
tem of  defence  in  the  north.     Phetti- 


place,  a  famous  pirate,  informs  the 
Council  that  John  O'Neal  the  Proud 
'  dependeth  for  fortification  on  sartin 
freshwater  loghes  in  this  country.  It 
is  thought  that  there,  in  the  said  fortified 
islands,  lyeth  all  his  plate,  which  is 
much,  and  his  money,  prisoners,  and 
gages.  He  hath  razed  the  strongest 
castles  of  his  country.'  See  what  Mr. 
Evelyn  Shirley  says  on  this  subject  in 
his  admirable  work,  called  Account  of 
the  Territory  of  Farney.  As  Hugh 
trusted  his  foster-brothers,  so,  accord- 
ing to  Phettiplace,  '  Shane's  strength 
and  safety  consists,  not  in  the  noblest 
of  his  men,  nor  in  his  kinsmen  nor 
brothers,  but  on  his  foster-brothers,  the 
O'Donnelly's,  who  are  three  hundred 
gentlemen.' 


COUNTY  OF  MONAGHAN. 


23 


Inglyshe  at   Ardmaghe,  it  was   yielded  upon  Composition    to 
Tyrone,  who  possesseth  the  same  at  this  instant. 


The    Principall   men 
of  this  Country  are  : 


The  Primate  of  Ardmaghe. 

The  Earl  of  Tyrone. 

O'Hanlons. 

Turloghe  Brasilagh. 

Sir    Turloghe    McHenrie   of 

Fewes. 
Art  McBarons  Sonnes.0 
The  Clero-ie  of  Armagh. 


the 


THE   COUNTIE    OF    MONAGHAN. 

This  Countie  was  in  tymes  past  called  Oriel,  given  at  the 
time  of  the  conquest  to  one  Reinold  FitzUrse,  or  Baresone, 
supposed  to  be  one  of  the  4  Knights  that  slew  Thomas  Beckett.3 
His  offspring  are  grown  mere  Irysh,  and  called  McMahon,  which 
signifyeth  in  Irish  the  Sone  of  a  Beer.b  He  hath  under  him 
three  Captains,  all  of  his  own  surname,  and  possesseth  the 
Countries  of  Loughty,  Dartire,  and  Ferny,0  which  last  bordereth 


0  Art  MacBaron  had  30  f.  and  30  h. 
— Dymniok.  Cormack  McBaron  had 
300  f.  and  40  h.,  and  O'Neil  had  always 
about  him  700  f.  and  200  h. — Carew 
Calendar,  p.  299. 

a  '  Sanct  Thomas  of  Canterbury.' — 
Dymmok.  From  this  extract  of  Dym- 
niok, and  from  a  blank  before  Thomas 
in  our  MS.,  it  appears  not  unlikely  that 
Sanct,  or  Saint,  was  in  the  original. 


b  Sir  Henry  Sydney,  Spencer,  Dym- 
mok, Campion,  and  others,  laboured 
under  this  delusion  j  but  Mr.  Evelyn 
Shirley  gives  the  pedigree  of  the 
McMahons,  and  shows  them  to  be  pure 
Celts.  Marshal  Bagnall  says  nothing 
of  the  'Bear's  Son.' 

c  '  Iriell,  Dartry,  Loghtie,  and  Trow.' 
— Bagnall.  '  Iriel,  Bartrey,  and  Ferney.' 
Dymmok. 


24  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

upon  the  Countie  of  Louth,  and  being  a  parcell  of  the  Ancient 
Possessions  of  the  Crowne,  was  given  to  the  Grandfathers  of 
this  Earle  of  Essex,  the  title  whereof  remayneth  in  the  now 
Earle,  his  Grandsonne.  There  is  not  in  this  Countie  any 
Corporat  Towne  or  place  of  importance,  save  2  or  3  defaced 
Monasteries  and  the  Lp.  of  Dunamore  belonging  to  the  Earle  of 
Essex. 

McMahon,  now  Capten  hereof,  is  Sister's  Sone  to  the  Earle  of 
Tyrone,  and  was  able  to  make  120  Horsemen  and  600  Footmen.d 
This  Countie  bordereth  upon  the  Countie  of  Louth  to  East,  to 
the  Countie  of  Cavan  or  Omelies  Countrie*  to  the  South  and 
South  East,  to  the  Lough,  called  Lougherne,  north-west,  and 
to  the  Countie  of  Ardmaghe  to  the  North. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  FERMANAGH. 

This  Countie,  called  commonlie  McGwyres  countrie,3  lyeth 
upon  both  sides  of  the  great  Lough  called  Erne,  and  Stretcheth 
northward  toward  O'donnell's  Countrie,  called  Tyrconnell ;  it 
hath  the  Countie  of  Tyrone  to  the  East,  Leytrim  to  the  West, 
and  to  the  South  Monaghan  and  part  of  the  Countie  of  Cavan. 

d  'In  1599,  McMaghone, Ferry  Clan-  '  Recte,  O'Reilly's  Countrie.     There 

carvell,  and  Patrick  IVPArte  Moyle,  in  is  in  No.   9   of  Ulster  Jour,   of  Arch. 

the  co.  of  Monaghan,  have  500  f.  and  a  curious,  coloured  old  map  of  Clones 

160  h.' — Careiv  Calendar.    '  McMahon,  and  Dartrie,  showing  the  'watch  toure' 

with  Ferney  and  Glancarvell,   McArty  (i.e.,    round  tower),  the    four    or    five 

Moyle  (being  a  competitor  for  ye  co.  of  churches,  the  Cross,  '  the  chapel,'  and 

Monahan'). — Dymnwk.    '  McMahowne  the  Abbey ;  and  the  bogs,  woods,  and 

in   Monaghan,  Ever   McCoolye  in  the  mountains  all  around. 

Ferney,   and   others   of  that  name  in  a  Conteineth   all    Farmanaghe,  Ter- 

Clankarvil,  500  f.  and  i6oh.' — Moryson.  mingraghe,  and  Tyrmin-Omungan.  Bag. 


COUNTY  OF  TYRONE. 


25 


This  Countrie  for  the  most  part  is  verie  Strong  of  Wood 
and  Bogg,  especiallie  near  the  great  Lake  called  Erne,  wherein 
is  diverse  Hands,  full  of  Woods.  Buildings  in  this  Countrie  are 
none  of  importance,  the  chief  Hous  is  Inishkellen,  demolished, 
which  is  Situat  in  one  of  the  greatest  Hands  in  the  Lough. 
The  present  Capten  is  named  S'  Conner  roe  McGwyre,  an  old 
man  .  .  .  was  able  to  make  almost  of  his  own  Surname  120 
Horsemen  and  600  Footemen.b 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  TYRONE. 


The  Countie  of  Tyrone  contayneth  all  the  Land  from  the 
Black  Water  to  the  Laffer  and  fyne.a  This  was  the  portion 
assigned  to  Turlo°;he  Lenogbe  O'Nealle  in  the  Treatie  between 
him  and  the  Earle  of  Essex,  who  before  had  comandemend  of 
all  Lands  Southward  to  the  Inglysh  Pale. 

This  Countie  hath  the  great  Louche  called  Eaghe  to  the 
East,  and  the  Countie  of  Coleraine  to  the  West,  the  Countie  of 
Ardmagh  to  the  South,  and  Tyrconnell  to  the  North.     The 


b  '  He  hath  600  f.  and  100  h.' — Carew 
Calendar.  '  He  is  able  to  make  (and 
most  of  his  owne  nation),  80  horsemen, 
240  shot,  and  300  kerne.' — Bagnall. 
'  He  is  left  always  to  the  rule  and  com- 
mandment of  O'Neil,  and  yet  be  very 
desirous  to  depend  on  the  Queen.' — 
Bagnall.  However,  this  Maguire,  six 
years  afterwards,  i.e.,  in  1594,  would 
not  suffer  any  man  to  pass  through  his 
country,  who  wore  an  English  hat  or 
cloak  (S.  Paper,  10  Feb.  1594).     'He 


is  one  of  O'Neil's  Uraughts ;  he  hath 
not  any  of  name  under  him  but  his 
owne  kindred  ;  he  is  under  the  bishop 
of  Clohn  in  the  Co.  of  Tyrone.' — 
Dymmok. 

The  Uriaghs  just  mentioned  were 
'sub-kings'  (Oir-righ)  who  paid  tribute 
to  their  King,  and  joined  his  standard 
in  time  of  war. 


a  'from  Black  water  to  Liffer.'- 
nall. 


-Bag- 


26  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 

now  Earle  of  Tyrone  claiming  this  Countrie  from  his  Grand- 
father, and  growing  Strong  upon  Turloghe  Lenaghe,  the  last 
O'Neall,  and  wynning  his  followers  from  him,  lest  it  should 
burst  out  into  Warr,  a  composition  was  made  between  them  by 
Sir  John  Perrot,  L.  Deputie,  that  for  the  life  of  the  said  O'Neale, 
the  Earle  should  paie  to  him  for  a  portion  of  Land  being  almost 
the  halfeb  of  the  Countie  Southwards,  iooo  marks  Stir,  yearlie, 
which  Composition  thoghe  the  Earle  did  not  observe,0  yet  the 
Deputies  succeeding  wou'd  not  have  the  same  broken  during 
the  Life  of  the  said  O'Neall,  after  which  the  Earle  of  Tyrone 
became  M*  of  all,  first  under  the  name  of  Earle  of  Tyrone,  but 
in  the  entire  of  his  Rebellion  perceiving  the  Iryshrie  more  to 
affect  the  name  of  O'Neall,  he  caused  himself  to  be  chosen 
O'Neall  after  the  ancient  manner,  thereby  disannulling  the  Act 
of  Parliament,  which  had  altogether  [abrogated]  the  name  and 
Creation  of  O'Neall,  made  when  his  Grandfather  Con  O'Neall 
was  made  Earle  of  Tyrone. 

The  Inhabitants  of  this  Countrie  and  the  chief  Gentlemen  of 
the  0'Neallsd  amongst  whome  were  the  Sonnes  of  Shane 
O'Neall,    Henrie,    Hugh,   Con,  and   Arthur.     The  Eldest  and 

b  '  the  half  thereof  and  more.' — Bag-  casion  of  much  mischiefe  and  disorder; 

nail,  th'  other  that  by  this  division  it  will 

'which   (1000   marks  a   year)   hath  weeken  the  force  and  greatness  of  such 

been    detayned   by   the    Erie  :    where  as  shall  succeede,  whereby  they  shall 

throughe  it  is  like  that  some  trouble  will  not  be  of  power  to  do  the  hurt  they 

arise    betwceue    them    or    it    be   longe.  were  wont.' — Bagnall. 
Turlough  desireth  from  her  Matie  to  his 

sonne  that  portion  of  Tyrone,  wherein  ' first  the  0neyles'  who  m°St  ar<; 

he  dwelleth,  and  is  the  remotest  parte  a11    horsemen;    the   Clandonnells,   all 

from  th'  English  Paleward.     The  grant-  galloSlas  ' the  Odoonelles,  a  very  strong 

ing  whereof  were  very  expedient;  the  ^   and    much    affected    t0    Shane 

one  for  extinguishing  their  barborous  0nell's  sonnes> the  HaSans  and  Quyns- 

custom  of  Tanestship,  which  is  th'  oc-  —£ag>ia^- 


COUNTY  OF  TYRONE.  2J 

the  youngest  were  Prisoners  in  the  Castle  of  Dublin,  but 
escaped;  in  which  escape  Henry  wounded  himself  negligentlie 
[accidently]  with  a  knife  as  he  was  slipping  down  the  Cord  to 
Escape,  and  died  of  the  wound ;  Con  and  Arthur  are  Prisoners 
with  the  Earle ;  Hughe  was  Hanged  by  the  Earle  upon  a 
Suspicion  that  he  had  intended  his  death,  which  was  the  cause 
of  the  great  hatred  between  Tyrone  and  McSleyne  in  Scotland, 
Hugh's  Mother  being  McCleynes  Father's  Sister.  In  this 
Countie  also  is  O'Neall's  Turlogh's  Grand  Son  to  the  last 
O'Neall. 

This  Countie  hath  not  Townes,  but  divers  ruined  Castles,  as 
Dungannon,  the  Earles  principall  Hous,  which  himself  cast 
down  to  the  middest  after  he  had  well  .  .  .  builded  it  and 
covered  it  with  Lead,  when  Sir  William  Russell,  late  Lord 
Deputie,  approached  with  the  Armie  thereto  ;  Omaghe,  New- 
castle, Benburge,e  and  Strabane,  which  was  the  place,  where  the 
last  O'Neall  had  his  Residence,  whose  Wife  being  a  Scottish 
woman  drew  great  repair  of  Scottishmen  thither  insomuch  as  at 
this  present  there  are  above  3  or  four  Score  Scottish  Familes 
inhabitting  there.  This  Countie  is  able  to  make  450  Horsemen 
and  8oof  Footemen. 


The  Odoonells  were  the  O'Donnellies  In  1592  'the  forces  of  Tyrone  were 

who    were    foster-brothers    of   Shane  930  h.  and  5,260  f.,  of  which  20  horse 

O'Neil,  and  who  numbered '300  gentle-  and  1,000  foot  were  retained  by  the 

men  of  their  name'  according  to  the  Earl  of  Tyrone.' — (Carew  Calendar,  p. 

pirate  Phettiplace.  73).     '  Where  the  Earle  of  Tyrone  hath 

e  called  Benburb  by  Shane  O'Neil.  rule  is  the  fairest  and  goodliest  countrie 

f'3oo  h.  and  1,500  f.,  but  alwaies  in  Ireland,  and  many  gentlemen  of  the 

the    strength    and    greatness   of    the  Neyles  dwell  therein.'     {Letter  of  Lord 

Oneyles  stoode  chiffest  upon  bandes  of  Chancellor    Cusack    of   the    &th    May 

Scottes,  whom  they  caused  their  Uri-  1552,  quoted  by  the  Editor  of  Bagnall's 

aughes  to  victual  and  paye.' — B agnail.  MS.) 


28  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  COLERAINE. 

This  Countie  beareth  this  name  of  the  Castle  of  Coleraine 
upon  the  North  side  of  the  Banne,  and  not  of  the  Abbey  of 
Coleraine,  which  is  on  the  other  side  of  the  River.  It  con- 
tayneth  all  the  Land*  between  the  Rivers  of  Banne  and  Lough- 
foile  along  the  Sea  coast.  It  hath  the  Sea  to  East,  Tyrone  and 
the  Woods  of  Clanknockkeyne  to  the  West,  the  Banne  to  the 
South,  and  Loughfoile  to  the  North.  There  is  no  man  of  name 
in  it,  But  Sir  Donald  Ocaen  and  his  Freeholders ;  This  Ocaen 
is  the  cheif  of  O'Neall's  Vassalls,b  and  createth  him  O'Neall  by 
casting  a  Shoe  over  his  head  upon  a  Hill  in  Tyrone. 

He  is  able  to  make  near  200  Horsemen,  which  are  esteemed 
the  best  Horsemen  that  O'Neall  hath,  and  500  Footmen  ;c  and 
because  he  Lyeth  near  Scotland,  he  was  well  affected  to  the 
Scotch  and  gave  them  yearlie  great  relief;  he  hath  2  strong 
Castles  upon  Loughfoyle — Armaghd  and  Limevady,  and  upon 
the  Banne,  near  the  Salmond  Fishing,  2  Castles — the  Castle  of 
Coleraine  somewhat  defaced  yet  Wardable,  and  Castle  Roe 
wherein  O'Neall  was  wont  to  keep  a  Ward  to  receive  his  part 
of  the  Fishing. 

a  '  all  o'Cahan's  country.' — B agnail.  the  Rebellion  in    Ulster  1596. — Careiv 

b  '  Uraughts.'     Dymmok.  Calendar. 

In    1590   the    Earl   of   Tyrone   re-  d  'Anagh.' — Bagnall     In  1542  the 

nounced  meddling  with  the  '  Uriats ;'  Lord     Dep.    and    Council    wrote    to 

but  saido'Cane  was  noneof  the 'Uriatts,'  Henry  VIII.  about  a  proude  obstynate 

being  an  inhabitant  within  the  county  Irysheman  called  O'Cathan.     {Printed 

of  Tyrone.  State  Papers,  Vol.   iii.  p.   408).     The 

c  In  1592 'the  forces  of  Colrane  were  O'Cahans      were      descended      from 

400  h.  and  1,000  f.  {Carew  Calendar,  O'Cathan,  grandson  of  O'Niall  of  the 

p.  73).     '  A  garrison  should  be  placed  Nine  Hostages.    They  ruled  Ciannacta 

at  Deny,  bordering  upon  O'Cahan,  the  from  at  least  the  year  1138,  and  were 

chief  strength  of  horse  that  the  Earl  styled  in  Irish  High  (Kings),  or  Tigh- 

has.' — Mr.  Francis  Shane,  Discourse  on  earna  (Lord),  or  Taoiscach  (Chief). 


COUNTY  OF  DUNNIGALL.  29 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  DUNNIGALL. 

This  Countie  contayneth  all  Tyrconnell,  and  is  the  greatest 
of  all  the  Shyres  of  Ulster,  and  contayneth  all  the  Land  to  the 
River  of  Fynne  northward  to  the  Sea.  From  the  East  Sea  to 
the  County  [River]  of  Earne  near  the  Countie  of  Sligo,  so  hath 
it  the  Sea  upon  the  East  and  North,  the  River  Fynne  to  the 
South,  and  Earne  to  the  West.  This  Countie  contayneth  all 
O'Donnells  and  Odocherties  Countrie.  [The  first  year  that 
the  K.  came  into  England  this  Country  was  erected  into  an 
Earldom,  etc.]  O'Donnell  is  Captain  and  Governor  of  Tyr- 
connell, the  chief  strength  of  whom  standeth  upon  2  Septs  of 
People  called  0'Gallochiesb  and  McSwynes  who  are  all 
Galloglasses  [That  is  men  armed  with  Coates  of  Mayl  Steel 
Bonetts,  Swords  and  pole  axes].  He  is  able  to  make  about 
300  Horsemen  and  so  many  more  Footmen.0 

b  '  O'Galchoule.' — Carew  Calendar.        whom  80  h.  and  500  f.  were  retained 

<  /-»/-  11     u  11     .         z>         71         T  by  O'Donnell.  In  1599  O'Donnell  had 

O  Gallochelles.  —  Baenall.        In  '     ,         ,              r      J    r.        1-1 

r.           z.  •*  •     ™^i_  1                    j    1  180  h.  and  1,250  f    of  whom  he  kept 

Dymmok  it  is  O  Chaloganes,  and  the  ...       ,     ,          ,           ?      r- 

.           ,  _,.                .    °        '         ,  round  him   60  h.  and  200  f. — Carew 

learned  Editor  surmises,  that  perhaps  -,  ,     ,          .          ,.              „           71 

.    .     „,TT  .             ,         ,„/,■>  Calendar.     According  to  Dymmok  he 

it  is  O  Halagan ;  but  the  Betagh  and  ,     .              ,       ,           ,    ,     ,■       ,    , 

r,         „,,cc.       •  .       ,    ™~  „     ,  had  3,000  f.  and  200  h.  for  his  whole 

BagnallMSS.  point  to  the  O  Gallaghers,  °'        .  TT.                   .    ,                c. 

i           *      . .  1  .  ,   , ..  ,,         -,?,       c  country.     'His  country  is  large,  profit- 

'a   sept   which  inhabit  the  middle  of  ,,       ',          ,          ,  .          ,          -, 

rre   r,         n,           .,      ,  t.        ■    .         „  able  and  good — a  ship  under  sail  may 

Tir-Connell,    says  the  'Description  of  °  r           r  ,  .     ,            ,      ,1 

T        ,   „     ,    .       ,      ,     ,-r,  ...  ,     ,  ,  come    to    four    of   his    houses.       (X. 

Lough  Foyle  in  1601.      (Published  by  „,,,„,   .            . 

tt    Z    t  -n>    tt         ■     xt        o     r   tt,  /  Chancellor  Citsackin  1552). 

Herbert  F.  Hore,  in  No.  18  of  Ulster  .          ,.                 ~            ,,co     , 

t    £  a     7  \     ^!_     ™^  11      1       r   ,  According    to     Carew    Mbb.    614, 

/  of  Arch.)     The  O'Galchoule  of  the  rtm_  .,  *     <  A.  .      f  T  nrAo  nf  c^Z 


Carew  MSS.  is  called  0 ' Gallchubhar  in 


O'Donnell  was  '  the  best  Lorde  of  fyshe 

in  Ireland, and  exchangeth  fyshe  alwaies 
the  F.  Mast.  an.  1586  and  1587.  .,,..'  .     °    r  J     .  , 

J  J    '  with  foreign  merchants  for  wine;    by 

c  '  200  h.  and  1,300  f.' — Bagnall.   In      which   his   call   in   other  countries   is 

1592  there  were  in  O'Donnell's  country      King  of  the  Fishe?     (No.  7   Ulst.  J.  of 

of  Tir-connell  310  h.  and  2,680  f.,  of     Arch.  p.  148-9). 


30  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 

Between  O'Donnell  and  O'Neall  in  tymes  past  hath  been 
continual  Warr  for  the  Castle  of  Liffer  and  the  Lands  there- 
abouts, Lying  between  both  their  Countries  and  bordering  upon 
Loughfoyle,  by  which  means  of  their  dissention  it  was  kept 
altogether  Wast  and  uninhabitted,  until  the  late  Ouene  took  it 
into  her  hands,  and  made  it  a  Garrison  place,  and  so  remayneth 
unto  this  day.  This  controversie  was  taken  away  by  a  double 
Marriage.  Tyrone  having  married  O'donnell's  Sister,  by  whom 
he  hath  divers  Sonnes,  and  O'Donnell  having  married  his 
Daughter,  whom  many  yeares  he  hath  cast  off  for  Barronness. 

O'Dogherties  Countrie  is  a  promontory  almost  environed 
with  the  Sea,  namlie,  with  Lough  Swilly  on  the  South,  and 
Loughfoyle  on  the  North.  It  is  Governed  by  a  Capten,  called 
Sir  Caher  O'doghertie,  who  not  being  of  power  able  to  defend 
himself  was  forced  to  contribute  both  to  O'Neall  and  O'Donnell, 
and  by  turne  to  Serve  them  both.  His  Country  lying  upon  the 
Sea,  and  upon  the  Isles  of  Ila  and  Jura  in  Scotland,  was  wont 
almost  yearlie  to  be  invaded  by  the  Scotch,  who  tooke  the 
Spoyles  at  their  pleasures,  whereby  O'Doghertie  was  forced 
always  to  be  at  their  devotions  [He  was  latelie  Killed.] 

He  was  able  of  his  own  Nation,  and  others  his  followers,  to 
make  80  Horsemen  and  300  Footemen.d  Buildings  in  this 
Countrie  are  the  Ordy  [Orey]e  which  is  defaced,  and  Creen 
Castle/  which  is  also  defaced. 

d  60  h.  and  300  f. — Bagnall.  is  one  of  the  sept  of  the  O'Gallocars. 

*  '  Dery,  which  is  defaced,  and  Green-  He  dwelled  in  1600  at  the  Castle  and 

castle,  and  [  .  .  .  ]  which   are  ward-  Church  of  Fanne.  {Lough  Foyle  in  1601 

able.'  —  Bagnall.       All     that     follows  by  H.  J.  Hore). 

about  Tir-connell  is  not  in  the  Bagnall  '  On  the  south  syde  of  the  country 

MS.  at  the  coming  to  the  Loughe,  an  ould 

The  Derie  stood  three  miles  above  ruined  Castle  called  Newcastle.     Here 

Culmore ;  there  the  Bishop  dwelt,  who  dwells  Hugh  Boy  mack  Caire,  one  of 


COUNTY  OF  DUNNIGALL.  3  I 

This  Countie  hath  some  principall  Castles  belonging  to  it — ■ 
Dunigall,6  O'Donnell's  chief  Hous,  from  whence  the  Countie 
hath  the  name ;  Ballyshannon,h  standing  upon  the  Earne,  a 
Strong  Hous,  by  the  means  whereof  O'Donnell  passeth  the 
River  of  Earne  at  his  pleasure,  and  entereth  Conaught  in  a 
manner  quietlie,  Lyffer  and  Fynne,1  he  had  also  Beleeke  and 
Bundroose  beyond  the  River  of  Earne  on  Conaught  side ; 
besides  the  Abbeys  of  Dunigall,  Asherowe,  and  Darrie,  all 
ruined  saving  Dunigall,  latelie  re-edifyed  by  the  Earl  of  Tyr- 
connell,  and  Sundrie  other  small  Fryries.j 

The  Principal  men  in  this  Countie  [It  is  now  in  the  King's 
hands  and  kept  with  a  Garrison.  Defaced.  Beleke  is  now  the 
possession  of  S.  H.]  are  Sir  Roger  O'donnell,  Earle  of  Tyr- 
connell,  The  Bishops  of  Derrie  and  Rafoe,  Hugh  Duff 
0'Donnell,k  who  challengeth  a  title  the  whole  Countrie.  [Hugh 
Oge  Roe,  Sonne  and  heyre  to  the  said  S"  Hugh  by  the 
Daughter  of  James  McConnell.  Defaced.  S'  Hugh,  Chief  of 
his  name,  who  hath  resigned  his  place  to  his  Sone  and  betaken 

the  O'Doghertie  sept ;  It  is  called  also  of  Dunboye  ;  O'Donnell's  mother  at  the 

Greencastle,  but  in  Irish  Caiskan  nua,  forts  of  McGwyvelin  and  Cargan. 

i.e.,  the  new  Castle. — Hore.  j  The  Fryars  dwell  in  the  abbayes  of 

Kil  O'Donnell,  of  Ballaghan,  of  Asheroe, 

s  Here  is   a   good   haven,  and   the  and  of  Donegall.  Bishop  O'Gallogher's 

river  Esk  falls  into  it,  also  an  Abbey  houses  were  the  Derry,  the  Castle  and 

and  a  Castle.     Three  miles  above  it  is  Church  of  Fanne  ;  and  at  the  Castle  of 

Lough  Eske,  O'Donnell's  chief  keeping  Kilmerrish  at  the  lower  end  of  O'Boyle's 

and  chief  store-house  for  the  warr.—  country  nved  the  Bishop  of  O'Boyle. 

Hore-  At  a  Castle  and  Church  called  Clon- 

h  tun.        j     11    -ivTcrMT-i  1  meny  lives  a   priest  called  Amerson. 

*  'Where  dwells  McO  Dongonrye. —      ,_     ,        ,    ,  ,„       TT     , 

TT  a       j  (Condensed    from    Mr.    Hore s    Loumh 

Foyle  in  1601). 
O'Donnell  dwelt  at  Differ,  and  Cul  k  Hugh  McHugh  Duffe,  I  presume, 

MacTryne;  and  Neal  Garve,  at  Castle      who  lived  in  the  Castle  of  '  Ramaltan,' 
Fene ;  Shane  McManus  Oge,  at  the  fort     which  stands  upon  the  Lanan. 


32 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1598. 


himself  to  the  Monasterie.]  Hugh  McConnell,1  adopted,  who  is 
also  a  Competitor  for  the  Capitencie,  and  was  many  years 
accompted  the  Sonne  of  Dronisk  O'Gallochie. 

The  2  Sonnes  of  Con  O'Donnell. 

S'r  Caher  O'Doghertie,™  Knight,  Capten  of  his  Countrie. 

Sir  Owen  O'Gallochie." 

McSwyne  Baine.° 

McSwyne  faine.p 

McSwyne  a  Doagh.q 


Quaere,  was  he  the  '  Seneschal 
McGonell  who  dwelt  at  the  haven  of 
Calboy?'— (See  Hore). 

m  Of  this  name,  the  Chief,  Sir  Cahir, 
lived  at  Don-yrish  fort,  at  the  Castle  of 
Elloghe  (Oilcach),  and  at  the  Castle  of 
Birt  he  had  a  ward  of  40  men  ;  Hugh 
Boy  McCaire  at  Greencastle,  and  his 
brother  Shane  M'Duffe  at  Moville ; 
Phelimy  Og,  the  chief's  brother,  at  the 
fort  of  Culmore.  In  the  island  of 
Ench  lives  Doultach  O'Dogherty ; 
Conor  McGarret  O'D.  at  Buncrana 
Castle  J  Phelim  Brasleigh  O'D.  at  Car- 
rigbraghey  Castle;  Phelim  Brasleigh 's 
two  sonnes  at  the  Castle  of  Caslan- 
Stoke,  and  the  fort  of  Don-Owen ; 
McShane  O'Doghertie  at  Caldanylie. 

This  country  is  called  Inishowen; 
the  midland  country  is  mostly  moun- 
tainous, and  hath  few  inhabitants. 
Also  in  this  country  Hugh  Carrogh 
M'Loughlin,  chief  of  his  sept,  dwells  in 
the  Castle  of  Caire  MacEwlyn,  and 
Brien  Og  M'Loughlin  at  the  Castle  of 
Garnegall.  (Condensed  and  arranged 
from  the  Description  of  Lough  Foyle, 
edited  by  Hore). 


"  Donel  Gallocar,  one  of  O'Donnell's 
chief  councillors,  lives  at  the  fort  of 
Ballakit.  The  O'Galloghers  lived  in 
the  Baronies  of  Raphoe  and  Tirhugh, 
had  a  Castle  at  Ballyshannon,  were  the 
Constables  of  the  Castle  of  Lifford  and 
commanders  of  O'Donnell's  cavalry. 
Perhaps  '  M'O'Dongonry  who  dwells 
in  Ballashannon,'  mentioned  in  Mr. 
Horis  MS.,  is  a  mistake  for  O'Gallo- 
gher. 

0  dwells  at  M'Swyn  O'Bane's  Tower; 
Hugh  Boy  McSwyne  (O'Bane's  brother) 
at  the  Castle  of  Bromoyle. 

p  At  the  castle  and  abbey  of  Ramel- 
lan  is  M'Swyn  O'Fane's  chief  country 
House ;  Menrice  (near  Red  Haven)  is 
also  a  castle  of  M'Swyn  O'Fanets. 
Red  Haven  (where  dwells  Alexander 
McDonologe)  separates  the  countries 
of  McSwyne  O'Fane's  and  M'Swyn 
O'Doe's. 

q  of  the  castle  of  Conogarhen. 
'  O'Boyle's  chief  house  is  O'Boyle, 
where  the  ships  used  to  ride.'  (The  notes 
in  this  column  are  taken  from  Hore's 
Lough  Foyle). 

Our  MS.  does  not  state  the  forces 


COUNTY  OF  DUNNIGALL.  33 

All  Ulster"  is  now  joined  together  in  Rebellion  against  the 
Quene,  saving  the  Countie  of  Louth,  a  little  piece  of  land  about 
the  Newrie  and  the  Towne  of  Craigfergus  ;  all  the  Captens  of 
Countries  are  bound  to  the  Earle  of  Tyrone,  either  by  Affinitie 
or  Consanguinitie  or  duetie  ;  for  O'Donnell  is  his  Brother-in-law, 
his  first  Wife  being  O'Donnell's  Sister,  McGwyre  is  his  Coosen 
Germane,  for  the  Earl's  mother  was  this  McGwyres  Father's 
Sister ;  Ocaen  is  his  Coosen  Germane,  for  his  Father's  Sister 
was  Ocaen's  mother  ;  further,  Ocaen  is  his  chief  Vassell,  and  of 
late  he  hath  married  this  Earle's  Daughter,  whom  O'Donnell 
hath  divorced  from  him ;  McMahon  is  his  near  Kinsman ; 
McGynnes  is  his  Brother-in-law,  for  his  present  Lady  is 
McGynnes's  Sister. 

Tyrone  is  a  man  valiant,  Temperate  and  wise,  well  brought 
up,  partlie  in  the  Court  of  Ingl.,  and  a  Speciall  actor  in  all  the 
Warrs  of  Ireland  these  xxx  years,  whereby  he  is  become  a  man 
of  great  expereance,  to  which  parts  some  ambition  is  joyned.  He 
is  now  become  impotent  to  contayne  himself  within  his  bounds ; 
but  Seeketh  to  Usurpe  the  whole  province. 

His  forces,  when  the  Countrie  is  as  hath  been  said,  5,800 
Footemen  and  1,870  Horsemen,  To  whom  many  ill  disposed 
persons  from  all  parts  of  the  Land  hath  conjoyned  themselves, 

of  O'Donnell's  sub-chiefs  or  Oir-righ,  so  wild,  as  never  conquered  nor  quiet ; 

viz.,    'The    Donnelagh's   country,    be-  whollyinrebellionexceptsomescores(?), 

twixt  the  river  Fynn  and  Lough  Swilly,  the  climate  unwholesome;  the  passages 

possessed  by  Con  O'Donnell's  sons  and  so  difficult  as  that  my  Lord  Burgh . 

McHugh  Duff,  hath  150  f.  and  30  h.  ;  The  General  Norreys  never  could  look 

McSwyne's  cuntry,  McS\vine  de  Band,  over   the   water.    Good    soldiers   well 

McSwyne  de  Fand,  and  MacSwyne  de  armed   and   in   blood.       The  Scottish 

Doe,  hath  500  f.  and  30  h.     O'Boyle's  islands,  which  yield  men  and  provisions, 

country   reached   to    Calebegge,    hath  Clyfford    betrayed ;    Bingham    lightly 

100  f.  and  20  horse.' — SeeCareiv  Calen.  condemned.' — Memorial  for    Ireland, 

"  Ulster. — A  country  so  strong  and  written  in  Cecil's  hand,  Nov.  4,  1598. 

E 


34 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 


besides  a  certen  number  of  Scots  whom  he  entertayneth  upon 
the  Bonnaghts  of  the  Countrie,  whereby  his  Forces  will  extend 
to  the  number  of  about  One  [Ten]  thousand.5 


s  The  summa  totalis  of  such  horse  and 
foote  as  the  Erie  of  Tyrone  hath  very 
lately  plotted  to  be  cessed  and  waged 
by  the  several  Captaynes  and  Lords  of 
Cuntries  in  ye  Province  of  Ulster  is 
foote  8430,  horse  1130  ;  in  all  9560. — 
Dymmok,  p.  30.  'In  1600  the  main 
strength  of  the  chieftains  of  Ulster 
was  9000  f.  and  800  h.' — Careio  Calen- 
dar, p.  405.  In  1598  Capt.  Francis 
Stafford  gave  '  The  List  of  the  Horse 
and  Foot  of  Ulster  under  the  Earl's 
command  in  1598.' — Cormac  M'Baron 
of  Carrick-Teague,  60  h.  200  f.  ;  Art 
M'Baron  in  O'Neale's  land,  30  h.  80  f. ; 
Henry  McShane  of  the  Tynan,  30  h. 
80  f. ;  Phelimy  O'N.  of  Dunavall,  10  h. 
40  f.  ;  Con  MTerlagh  of  the  Tynan, 
10  h.  40  f.  ;  Con  McHenry,  between 
Tynan  and  Clougharde,  1 2  h.  40  f. ;  Sir 
Art  O'N.  of  the  Onye,  30  h.  50  f.  ;  Tir- 
logh  McHenry,  50  h.  100  f.  ;  Cormac 
O'N.  of  Lenough,  10  h.  30  f.  ;  Con 
O'N.,  s  h.  20  f.;  John  O'N.  of  Carrick- 
Teall,  20  h.  50  f. ;  Shane  McBryan  O'N. 
and  Neal  McHugh  O'N.  (Lords  of  the 
Lower  Clonduboyes),  Neal  M'Bryan 
Erto  O'N.  and  Owen  MacHugh  O'N. 
(Lords  of  Upper  Clanduboy),  and 
McSowrlie  of  the  Rowte,  60  h.  200  f. ; 
'  Tyrone  60  h.  for  himself  and  his  men, 
200  f.  under  Nugent  and  Tirrell,  and 
100  naked  Scots  with  bows '  =  60  h. 
300  f.  ;  Neal  O'Guin  of  Curran,  10  h. 
30  f.  ;  Oge  Guin,  20  h.  30  £  ;  John 
M'Donnell  Grome  of  Bunburbe,  8  h. 
40  f. ;  Edmund  Gynelagh  of  Knock-la- 


Glynche,  6  h.  30  f. ;  Bryan  Carrough 
McDonnell,  30  h.  60  f. ;  O'Mallow 
(Mallon  ?  Ed.)  of  Ellis  Flynn,  6  h.  20  f. ; 
O'Hagan,  i6h.  40  f. ;  Cormac  O'Hagan, 
ioh.  20  f. ;  O'Cane,  60  h.  60  f.  ;  O'Han- 
lon,  McGenyese,  and  Brian  McArt,  So  h. 
200  f.  ;  Maguyre,  50  h.  200  f.  ;  The 
McMahounds  together,  100  h.  300  f. ; 
O'Donnell,  O'Doherty,  and  Tirconnell, 
140  h.  1000  f.  Total  =1043  h.  and 
3540  foot. — Carew  Calendar,  p.  287. 

In  April  1599,  the  Ulster  forces  con- 
sisted of  1470  h.  and  6180  f.  The 
mustering  of  O'Donnell's  forces  in  that 
year  is  thus  quaintly  chronicled  in  the 
Irish  Annals  :  '  First  of  all  assembled 
the  Kinel-Connel,  among  whom  were 
Hugh  Oge  (the  son  of  Hugh  Duv,  son 
of  Hugh  Roe,  son  of  Niall  Garv 
O'Donnell) ;  and  Niall  Garv  (the  son 
of  Con,  son  of  Calvach,  son  of  Manus, 
son  of  Hugh  Duv)  ;  O'Dogherty  (John 
Oge,  the  son  of  Felim,  son  of  Conor 
Carragh) ;  O'Boyle  (Teig  Oge,  the  son 
of  Teig,  son  of  Torlogh,  son  of  Niall) ; 
MacSuiny  Fanad  (Donnal,  the  son  of 
Torlogh,  son  of  Mulmurry) ;  MacSuiny 
Banach  (Donogh,  the  son  of  Mulmurry 
Meirgeach,  son  of  Mulmurry,  son  of 
Niall)  :  all  these  with  their  forces.  To 
the  same  rendezvous  came  Maguire 
(Hugh,  the  son  of  Cuconnacht,  son  of 
Cuconnacht,  son  of  Cuconnacht,  son 
of  Brian,  son  of  Philip,  son  of  Thomas) ; 
the  son  of  O'Rourk ;  and  the  MacWil- 
liam.' 


LEINSTER. 

Contayneth  that  portion  of  Land  which  was  conquered  by  the 
Inglysh,  including  the  Counties  of  Dublin,  Kildare,  Catherlaghe, 
Wexford,  Kilkenny,  King's  and  Ouene's  countie,  and  latelie  one 
other  Countie  taken  out  of  the  Counties  of  Dublin  and  Wexford, 
called  by  the  name  of  Wickloe.3 

DUBLIN. 


Dublin  contayneth  all  the  Land  from  Baleratherie,  nere  the 
Countie  of  Meath,  to  Bray,  which  is  the  Length  of  the  Shyre, 
and  includeth  all  the  Land  between  the  Naas  and  Dublin,  which 


a  '  The  Irish  Septs  planted  in  Leinster 
are,  according  to  Sir  H.  Sydney's  Col- 
lections, the  Bymes,  Tooles,  Cavanaghes 
(which  is  the  nation  of  the  Macmur- 
row),  Omores,  O'Connores,  Odempsyes, 
Odun.'  '  The  Irish  coursed  the  English 
into  a  narrow  circuite  of  certaine  shires 
in  Leinster,  which  the  English  did  choose 
as  the  fattest  soyle,  most  defensible, 
their  proper  right,  and  most  open  to 
receive  help  from  England.  Hereupon 
it  was  termed  their  pale,  as  whereout 
they  durst  not  peepe.  But  now  both 
within  this  pale,  uncivill  Irish  and  some 
rebells  doe  dwell,  and  without  it  Coun- 
treyes  and  cities  English  are  well  go- 
verned.'—  Campion,  p.  2  &  4.  Ed.  1633. 


'  Leinster  includeth  all  that  ground 
from  Dublin  southwarde  to  the  river 
Suyre,  and  the  Cytty  of  Waterforde, which 
parteth  it  from  Munster.  The  river  of 
Shenin  in  MacCouglian's  country  de- 
videth  the  west  parte  fromConnaght  and 
Meath  ;  northwarde  yt  endeth  with  the 
barony  of  Balrothryand  theryver  Boyne, 
and  on  the  east  side  it  is  bounded  by 
the  sea.  They  have  gone  about  of  late 
to  add  two  other  shires,  the  counties  of 
Wicklo  and  Femes  ;  but  because  these 
two  shires  are  unperfett,  not  having  suf- 
ficient freeholders  and  gentlemen  to 
choose  Shriffes  and  other  principal 
officers,  or  to  make  a  jury  for  the  Queen, 
they  may  be  well  omitted.' — Dymtnok. 


36 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


is  the  bredth  thereof.  In  it  is  comprehended  the  Kingsb  and 
the  mountains,  some  of  the  O'Burnes  and  O'Tooles,  and  the 
crosse  of  the  Countie  of  Dublin,  being  the  Libertie  of  the  Arch- 
bishop, also  his  Hands  in  the  Sea,  as  Lambay,  Ireland's  Eye, 
and  Dalkey.  So  hath  it  the  Sea  to  the  East  part,  the  Counties 
of  Meath  and  Kildare  to  the  West,  the  Counties  of  Caterlaghe 
and  Wicklow  to  the  South,  and  the  Countie  of  Meath  to  the 
North. 

In  it  are  Townes,  viz. 
The  Citty  of  Dublin,  the  seat  of  the  Government,0  the  See 
of  the  Archbishop  Walled  with  a  Barred  Haven. 
Dumboyne 
Swords 

Luske         \  market  Townes  unwalled  and  without  priviledges. 
Ratoth 


'  The  whole  number  of  the  Rebels  in 
this  Province  of  Leinster  was  3048  foot 
and  182  horse.' — Moryson. 

'  Strangers  within  Leinster.  With 
Pheagh  M'Hugh's  sonnes  are  ye 
Clamoles  with  80  f.  ;  with  Murrogh 
McEdmimds'  sons,  30  Scotts  under 
Donogh  Ganco ;  of  Ulstermen  under 
Con  the  bastard  800  foote.' — Dymmok. 
'  The  Fastnesses  of  wood  and  bogge 
in  Leinster  are  Glandilore,  a  fastness  in 
Pheagh  McHugh's  cuntry.  Shilogh 
in  the  co.  of  Dublin.  The  Duffrin  in 
the  co.  of  Wexford.  The  Dromes  and 
Leverough  in  the  co.  of  Catherloghe. 
The  great  bogge  in  the  King's  Co. 
called  the  Tougher.  The  Fewes  in 
the  co.  of  Kildare.  The  woodes  and 
bogges  of  Monasterevan,   Gallin,  and 


Slymarge  in  the  Queen's  Co.  The 
Roure  near  S'  Mollines.  Part  of  Con- 
steragh,  joining  upon  Kilkenny.' — 
Dymmok,  26. 

b  The  King's  lands  and  the  moun- 
tains of  the  O'Byrnes,  O'Tooles  and 
Banilagh,  called  Pheagh  MacHugh's 
cuntry,  also  Shilo  and  Ferderrogh  and 
the  crosse  of  the  country.' — Dymmok. 

c  '  Dyvelin,  the  beauty  and  eye  of 
Ireland,  fast  by  a  goodly  river.  The 
seat  hereof  is  in  many  respects  comfort- 
able, but  less  frequented  of  marchant 
strangers  because  of  the  bard  haven. 
Its  Mayorality,both  for  state  and  charge 
of  that  office,  and  for  the  bountifull 
hospitality  exceedeth  any  Citty  in  Eng- 
land, except  London.' — Campion,  p.  2 
and  96. 


DUBLIN. 


37 


The  names  of  the  best  Villages  in  this  County. 

Balerotherie  Clondalkin  Kilshaughlin 

Hoth  Brey  Finglass 

Newcastle  Fieldstowne  Ballimore 
Kingsland 

Principal  Castles  in  this  Countie  are  these 

Swords  |  both  belonging  to  the  Archbishop  of  Dublin. 

Tallowghe     ) 

Rathfernen  [Built  by  Sr  Adam  Loftus] 


Dromconren 

Castle  Knock 

Monckton 

Dunshughlin 

Donibroke 

Newcastle 

Dromnaghe 

Malahide 

Merron 

Balgriffen 

Belgard 

Turvey 

Lucan 

Hoth 

Donamore 

Luttrelstone 

Holme  Patrick 

The  Ward 

Men  of  name  in 

The  Arch  Bishop  of  Dublin 
his  Deane  and  clergie 

L.  of  Hoth  his  name  St.  Law- 
rence [alias  Tristram] 

Sr  Henrie  Harrington 

Preston  of  Balmadon 

Sir  Garot  Elmerd 

Preston  of  Tassagard 

d  Garret  Aylmer  at  Munkton;  Talbot 
of  Faghsaghere ;  Couran  of  Wyartstone, 
Coran  of  Curragh.  Only  sixty  names 
are  given  in  the  Perambulation  of  the 
Pale  in  1596  ;  there  are  ninety-eight  in 


this  Countie  are 
Sr  Will™  Sarsfield,  Kn«- 

his  hous  is  Lucan 
Allen  of  S'  Wolstans 
Allen  of  Palmerston 
Talbott  of  Balgard 
Talbot  of  Templeoge 
Talbot  of  Fashd 
Talbot  of  Kilmarocke 

our  manuscript,  to  which  we  will  add 
the  following  from  the  Perambulation 
of  the  Pale  : — Ashpoole  of  Kenleston, 
John  Bath  of  Balgriffin,  Richard  Net- 
terville  of  Corballies,  Philip  Couran  of 


38 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Barnwall  of  Dromnaghe 
Walshe  of  Shaunogherghe 

[Shanganagh] 
Fitzwilliams  of  Merrion 
Fitzwilliams  of  Jobston 
Sr    William    Usher   of   Dona- 
broke 
Phelim    O'Toole    of    Powers- 

toune 
Walshe  of  Kilbegan 
Walshe  of  Carrickmayne 
Harold  of  the  Grange 
Archbold  of  Kellister 
Archbold  of  Bray- 
Bath  of  Dromconraghe 
Burnell  of  Castle  Knock 
Hollywood  of  Tartayne 
Nugent  of  Kilmore 
Golding  of  the  Grange 
Hackett  of  Sutton 
Talbot  of  Malahide 
Russell  of  Seaton 
Fitzsimons  of  Swords 


Tailor  of  Swords 
Caddell  of  Moreton 
Caddell  of  Caddelston 
Stokes  of  Knockyngen 
Wycam  of  Drynan 
Blackney  of  Riknhore 
Sinothe  of  Sinot  court 
Foster  of  Killerghe 
Sr  Chrisr  Plunket  Knt  of  Dun- 

shoghley 
Bealing  of  Bealingston 
Jordan  ofd 

Sr  Patrick  Barnewall  of  Turvey 
Barnewall  of  Broymore 
Stanihurst  of  Carduff 
Cruis  of  the  Naale 
Conran  ofd 
Beg  of  Borranston 
Sedgrave  of  Killecrlan 
Barnwall  of  Dunbroe 
Scurlock  of  Rathcredon 
Hamlen  of  Smitheston 
Field  of  Carduff 


Wyartown,  Coran  of  Curragh,  Sedgrave 
of  W.  .  .  .  ,  Golding  of  Tobbirsowle, 
Fagan  of  Feltrim,  Bath  of  Balgriffin, 
Bellew  of  Weston,  Belling  of  Kilcoskan, 
Brown  of  Kissak,  Fagan  of  Feltrim, 
Cardiff  of  Dunsink,  Dillon  of  Hunts- 
town,  FitzGerot  of  Damaston,  Fitz- 
william  of  Holmpatrick,  King  of  Clon- 
tarf,  Pypho  of  Hollywood,  Plunket  of 
the    Grange,    Russell    of    Dryneham, 


Walshe  of  Killegarge,  Walshe  of 
Ballawlie,  Walshe  of  Kilgobbon,  War- 
ren of  Drumconrath,  and  Peter  Travers 
of  Ballykey.  Doubtless  Beg  of  Bor- 
anstown,  Scurlock  of  Rathcredon,  and 
Finglas  of  Tippersold  are  the  same 
as  Bigg  of  Borarstown,  Scurlock  of 
Rathcredant,  and  Finglas  of  Tobber- 
ton  given  in  the  Carew  Calendar,  p. 


DUBLIN, 


39 


Luttrell  of  Luttrelstone 
Whyte  of  S'  Kathrens 
Eustace  of  Confy 
Dillon  of  Keppoch 
Taylor  of  Feltrim 
Finglas  of  Wespelston 
Finglas  of  Tippersole 
Goodman  of  Laughanston 
Delahide  of  Loughfenny 
Bath  of  Carrendeston 
Bath  of  Beccanston 
Sarkey  of  the  Hintch 
Barnwall  of  Laspelston 
Bath  of  the  new  1. 
Tallen  of  Westonc 
Bedlow  of  Reynoldston 
Hewitt  of  Gareston 
Young  of  Gareston 
Plunket  of  Brownston 
Sedgrave  of  Borranston 
Chamberlon  of  Kilresk 
Clinshe  of  Newcastle 


Reynold  of  Newcastle 
Russell  of  Newcastle 
Linche  of 
Mason  of 
Taylor  of  Ballown 
Den  of  Tassagard 
Fount  of  Tassagard 
Lock  of  Colmanston 
Tappock  of  Colmanston 
Fitzsimons  of  Balmadroght 
Protford  of  Protfordeston 
Tyrrell  of  Powerston 
Byrne  of  Ballyeane 
Mangen  of  Loughton 
Dungan  of  Loughton 
Pierce  of  Cromelin 
Caddell  of  Harbardstone 
Fitzsimons  of  the  Grange 
Newtervile  of  Kilsoghlie 
Ulverston  of  Stalorgan 
and  many  meane  freeholders 


Of  this  Countie  of  Dublin  there  is  some  in  this  action  of 
Rebellion.  The  Countrie  commonlie  called  by  the  late  Capten 
thereof  Fewghe  McHueh  his  contrie  is  full  of  Woods  and  Hills 
that  it  administereth  a  mervalous  Succour  to  the  Rebells  that 
lie  therein,  for  there  they  lie  safelie  in  a  manner,  and  the  Cattle 
having  pasture  in  abondance  can  hardlie  be  driven  away  there 
being  so  few  Entries  and  Outgates  into  the  Countrie.     In  this 


First  written  Callen,  and  then  the  C  was  changed  to  T. 


40 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


the  Rebells  remaynes  commonlie  all  day,  and  in  the  beginning 
of  the  Night  they  come  abroad  and  wast  the  Countries  farr  and 
nere,  and  the  Vicinitie  of  this  Countrie  to  Dublin  doth  much 
annoy  the  Cittie,f  for  it  being  within  four  or  Five  Miles  of  the 
Cittie,  the  Cittie  is  constreyned  to  keep  strong  watch  least  on  a 
sudden  these  Rebells  that  Lurke  in  these  Mountains  do  set  the 
Suburbs  on  Fire  which  hath  heretofore  been  done  by  them  in 
the  Goverment  of  the  late  L.  Grey.  The  now  head  Capten  of 
this  Countrie  is  called  Phelim  McFewghe8  who  is  able  to  make 
some  300  or  400  Footmen  but  no  Horsemen.      He  is  confederat 


f  Campion  thus  quaintly  speaks  of 
the  Dublin  mountaineers  : — 'While  the 
Deputy  staggered  uncertain  of  continu- 
ance, the  Tooles  and  the  Cavanaghes 
waxed  cockish  in  the  Countie  of 
Divelin,  ranging  in  flocks  of  seven  or 
eight  score,  on  whom  set  forth  the 
Marshal  and  the  Sheriffes  of  Divelin, 
Buckley  and  Gygen,  with  the  cities 
helpe,  and  overlaid  them  in  sudden 
skirmishes,  of  which  three  score  were 
executed  for  example.' — Campion's 
Historie,  p.  124.  Ed.  of  1633. 

s  '  Those  that  dwell  even  within  the 
sight  of  the  smoke  of  Dublin  are  not 
subject  to  the  laws.  The  very  gall  of 
Ireland,  and  the  flame  from  which  all 
others  take  their  lights  is  our  next 
neighbour  Pheaghe  M'Hugh,  who,  like 
one  absolute  within  himself,  with  his 
den  of  thieves,  ruleth  all  things  in  his 
own  country  at  his  own  will,  refusing 
in  person  to  come  to  the  Governor, 
and  spoiling  his  neighbours,  who  for 
fear  dare  not  complain.  His  force  does 
not  exceed  one  hundred  persons.     His 


neighbours  would  help  to  cut  him  off. 
The  Cavanaghs,  who  rely  upon  him, 
are  entered  into  the  like  kind  of  life.' — 
Sir  G.  Careiu  to  Mr.  Vice-  Chamberlain, 
Nov.  1590,  Carew  Calendar. 

Fewghe  or  Fiach,  though  not  the 
chief  of  the  O'Byrnes,  was  the  most 
warlike  and  powerful  man  of  his  name 
since  the  death  of  Dunlang,  who  was 
the  last  inaugurated  O'Byrne.  He  was 
chief  of  that  sept  of  the  O'Byrnes 
called  Gaval-Rannall,  and  lived  in  Glen- 
malure.  His  battles  and  victories  are 
recorded  in  several  poems  of  the  Lcab- 
har  Branach,  or  Book  of  the  (J Byrnes. 
The  jealousy  of  the  senior  branches  of 
the  O'Byrnes  led  to  his  betrayal  and 
death.  Fiach  left  three  sons,  viz  : 
Felim  who  was  M.P.  for  Wicklow  in 
16 13;  Raymund  and  Torlogh ;  also  a 
daughter,  who  was  m.  to  Walter  Reagh 
FitzGerald.  His  eldest  son,  Felim,  had 
eight  sons  and  a  daughter,  of  whom  the 
eldest,  Brian,  had  a  son  Shane  McBrian 
McFelim  of  Ballinacor,  who  was  a 
Colonel   of  the  Confederate   army  in 


DUBLIN. 


41 


with  Tyrone  and  comonlie  doth  most  mischief  when  the  companies 
withdrawes  from  Dublin  ether  against  Tyrone  or  the  Omoores, 
then  do  they  besturr  themselves  burning,  Spoiling,  and  praying 
thereby  Seeking  either  to  draw  back  the  Forces  from  any  pro- 
secution, or  else  to  divide  the  Forces  and  so  to  weaken  them 
that  they  may  either  be  the  more  easiliee  overthrown  or  be  com- 


164 1,  in  which  also  Hugh,  a  grandson 
of  Fiach,  was  a  lieutenant-colonel. 
After  the  year  1641  the  family  of 
Ballinacor  disappears  from  history. — 
See  O' Donovan' s  Notes  to  Four  Masters, 
an.  1597. 

'  Fiach  McHugh  continually  troubleth 
the  State,  though  he  lyeth  under  their 
nose  ;  plays  the  Hex,  gives  heart  and 
succour  and  refuge  to  all  against  her 
Majesty.  Through  his  boldness  and 
late  good  success  the  rebels  Byrnes 
and  Tooles  threaten  perill  even  to 
Dublin  over  whose  necke  they  contin- 
ually hang.  He  is  a  most  dangerous 
enemy  to  deal  withall.  Through  his 
own  hardinesse  lifted  himself  to  such  a 
height,  that  he  dare  now  front  Princes 
and  make  tearmes  with  great  potentates. 
. . .  A  thousand  men  should  be  laid  in  six 
garrisons  in  order  to  reduce  him — 200 
f.  and  50  h.  at  Ballinacor  to  shut  him 
out  of  his  great  glynne  ;  at  Knocke- 
lough,  200  f.  and  50  h.  to  answer  the 
co.  of  Catherlagh ;  at  Arclo  or  Wicklow 
200  f.  and  50  h.  to  defend  all  on  the 
Sea  side  ;  in  Shilelagh  100  f.  to  cut  him 
off  from  the  Kavanagh's  and  Wexford 
about  the  Three  Castles  50  h.  which 
should  defend  the  co.  of  Dublin  ;  at 
Talbotstown  100  f.  to  keep  him  from 


breaking  out  into  Kildare  and  to  be 
always  on  his  necke  on  that  side. 
These  garrisons  will  so  busie  him  that 
he  shall  never  rest  at  home  nor  stir 
abroad  but  he  shall  be  had  ;  as  for  his 
Creete  they  cannot  be  above  ground 
and  must  fall  into  our  hands.  By  good 
espialls,  whereof  there  they  cannot  want 
store,  they  shall  be  drawn  continually 
upon  him  ;  so  as  one  of  them  shall  be 
still  upon  him,  and  sometimes  all  at 
once,  bayting  him — unto  the  eternall 
quietness  of  that  Realme.' — Abridged 
from  Spencers  View,  p.  81.  Ed.  1633. 

The  Four  Masters  thus  record  his 
death  :  '  Fiach,  son  of  Hugh,  son  of 
John  from  Glenmalure  was  slain  in  the 
first  month  of  Summer  in  this  year, 
having  been  treacherously  betrayed  by 
his  relation  at  the  bidding  of  the  Chief 
Justiciary  of  Ireland,  Sir  W.  Russel.' 

Carew  called  him  '  the  firebrand, 
the  gall  of  Ireland,  the  ancient  traitor 
of  Leinster.'  In  1596  Elizabeth  made 
offers,  '  honorable  for  herself  and  not 
over  hard  for  Fiach:'  1st,  'Pardon 
for  himself,  his  wife,  sons  and  followers; 
and  restoration  to  his  house  and  livings 
by  letters  patent,  yielding  some  ser- 
vice. If  he  insists  on  getting  back  Bal- 
linacor and  will  not  be  reduced  without 

F 


42 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


pelled  more  warlie  to  prosecute  the   Rebells.     All  the   Gents 
betwixt  Dublin  and  these  mountains  do  daylie  susteyn  great 
losse  in  their  Goods,  and  sometimes  lose  their  Lives.11    There  is 
joyned  with  this  Phelim  some  few  of  the  Walshes,  and  some  of 
the  O'Tooles} 


it,  let  him  have  it,  and  hold  it  of  the 
Queen,  who  is  at  great  charges  to  keep 
it.  2nd,  He  must  promise  to  banish 
all  strangers,'  etc 

h  The  joy  of  these  gentlemen  of  Dub- 
lin at  Fiach's  death  appears  from  the 
following  entries  in  the  Lord  Deputy's 
Journal  :  '  May  8,  Sunday. — Early  in 
the  morning  our  foot  entered  the 
Glynnes,  and  fell  into  that  quarter, 
where  Fiach  lay ;  and  coming  several 
ways  on  him,  it  pleased  God  to  deliver 
him  into  our  hands,  being  so  hardly 
followed,  as  that  he  was  run  out  of 
breath,  and  forced  to  take  a  cave, 
where  one  Milborne,  sergeant  to  Cap- 
tain Lea,  first  lighted  on  him,  and  the 
fury  of  our  soldiers  was  so  great  as  he 
could  not  be  brought  away  alive  ;  there- 
upon the  said  sergeant  cut  off  Fiach's 
head  with  his  own  sword,  and  presented 
his  head  to  my  Lord,  which  with  his 
carcass  was  brought  to  Dublin  to  the 
great  comfort  and  joy  of  all  that  pro- 
vince. Many  of  his  followers  were 
slain  and  200  cows  were  taken  with 
much  pillage,  which  was  divided  among 
the  soldiers.  My  Lord  returned  to 
Rathdrome,  and  there  before  the  fort 
Knighted  Sir  Calistinas  Brooke,  Sir 
Thomas  Maria  Wingfield,  and  Sir 
Richard  Trevers.  9th  of  May. — My 
Lord  rode  to  Dublin.     All  the  way  the 


people  of  the  country  met  him  with 
great  joy  and  gladness,  and  as  their 
manner  is,  bestowed  many  blessings  on 
him  for  performing  so  good  a  deed  and 
delivering  them  from  their  long  oppres- 
sions. The  Council,  divers  noblemen, 
and  the  citizens  of  Dublin  with  many 
others  met  his  lordship,  and  he  was 
welcomed  with  universal  joy.' 

O'Sullivan  Beare  says  that  he  was 
betrayed  by  some  one  in  whom  he  had 
the  greatest  confidence,  'quodam,  quern 
fidissimum  habebat,  prodente  et  hostes 
ducente.'  Dr.  O'Donovan  thought  it 
was  Cahir  McHugh  Duffe ;  perhaps  it 
was  Hugh  Duffe  himself  who  figures 
in  Russell's  Journal  as  '  being  out  on 
service,'  and  as  '  certifying  that  he  had 
taken  certain  of  the  traitors'  heads.' 

Russell's  Journal  tells  us  that  Fiach's 
wife,  Rosa  O'Toole  was  found  guilty  of 
treason  and  '  sentenced  to  be  burned.' 
A  constant  entry  in  this  Journal  is, 
'  Heads  of  so  many  of  Fiach's  followers 
brought  in.'  If  followers  meant  hus- 
bandmen, or  old  men  or  women  of  his 
clan,  the  journal  is  black  indeed.  On 
the  9th  of  March  1597,  'my  Lord 
pledges  his  word  to  Ormond  that  he 
will  pardon  Garret  McMurtagh  if  he  cut 
off  20  heads  of  rebel  kernes.' 

'  However,  on  St.  Patrick's  Eve 
1597,  Phelim  O'Toole  brought  in  one 


DUBLIN. 


43 


This  Countie  of  Dublin  is  verie  fruitfull,  and  yealdeth  great 
plentie  of  all  kind  of  cornes  ;  but  if  the  Rebells  fear  prosecution, 
they  burn   the  Corn   that  the  Subject  may  not  have  means  to 


head  to  the  Deputy  and  made  a  prisoner 
of  one  of  Fiach's  followers.  In  1595 
Sir  H.  Harrington  '  complained  of 
Capt.  Lea  about  the  murdering  of  one 
of  the  O'Tooles,  protected  by  Council.' 
Old  Sir  Owen  O'Toole,  Knight,  though 
the  Lord  Deputy  pledged  his  word  he 
should  not  be  molested,  was  imprisoned 
for  six  years,  from  the  hardships  of 
which  he  died. — (See  Carew  Calendar. 
pp.  89,  153).  Felim  O'Toole  of  Teara- 
Cualann  lived  at  Powerscourt ;  he  and 
Brian  O'Toole  forfeited  their  territory 
of  '  Fercuolen,'  which  was  five  miles  in 
length  and  four  in  breadth.  O'Toole 
of  Castlekevin,  was  Fiach  O'Byrne's 
brother-in-law.  His  son  Fiach,  was 
deprived  of  his  property  by  James  I.  ; 
in  1 641  he  was  a  Colonel  in  the  Con- 
federate Army  in  which  two  of  his  sons 
held  commissions  as  Lieut-Colonel  and 
Major. 

The  Wexford  O'Tooles  are  the  most 
respectable  representatives  of  the  name. 

According  to  the  Carew  Calendar 
the  O'Tohills,  O'Bernes,  the  Galli- 
glasses  with  other  Irish  septs  had  500 
men  whereof  200  were  horse.  Moryson 
is  more  explicit,  and  perhaps  more 
accurate.  He  says  : — '  The  Mountainers 
of  Dublin  have  480  h.  and  20  f.  They 
are  Felim  McFeagh,  and  his  brother 
Redmond  with  their  sept  of  the 
O'Byrnes,  and  Phelim  McFeagh  with 
his  sept  of  the  O'Tooles,  and  Walter 


McEdward,  chiefe  of  the  gallowglasses, 
with  his  sept  of  the  MTJonnells.  Only 
two  castles,  Newcastle  and  Wickloe, 
Sir  H.  Harrington  held  for  the  Queen, 
and  all  the  rest  of  the  countrie  contin- 
ued loyal.' — Moryson,  p.  31. 

Essex  tells  us  that  near  this  castle  of 
Wickloe  Harrington  'was  overthrown 
in  1599,  and  our  troops,  having  advan- 
tage of  number  and  no  disadvantage  of 
ground  were  put  in  rout  and  many  cut 
to  pieces  without  striking  a  blow.  I 
called  a  martial  court  upon  the  captains 
and  officers.  Walshe,  lieutenant  to 
Captain  Loftus,  was  executed ;  the 
other  captains  and  officers  were  all 
cashiered  and  imprisoned  ;  the  soldiers 
were  all  condemned  to  die;  but  were 
pardoned,  and  only  every  tenth  man 
was  executed.  Sir  H.  Harrington,  be- 
cause he  is  a  privy  councillor  in  this 
Kingdom,  I  forbear  to  bring  to  trial  till 
I  know  her  Majesty's  pleasure.' — Essex 
to  Privy  Council,  July  n,  1599. 

At  Dublin  Sir  H.  Foulkes  commands 
the  L.  Lieutenant's  guard  of  200  f. 
In  Fingall  and  the  Navan  300  horse 
under  Sir  W.  Evers,  Sir  H.  Davers  and 
J.  Jephson;  in  the  co.  of  Dublin  60 
h.  under  Sir  H.  Harrington,  Sir  E.  Her- 
bert, Sir  Gerald  Aylemer,  and  Murrogh 
McTeig  Oge  ;  Sir  J"  Talbot  has  22  f. 
undisposed;  Sir  Wil.  Warren  has  50 
horse  and  100  f.  at  Newcastle. — Mory- 
son, p.  43. 


44  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

relieve  the  Soldiers  in  the  tyme  either  of  prosecution  or  cessation, 
whereupon  ensueth  extream  miserie  either  to  the  Countrie  man 
Souldier,  or  both;  for  the  Souldiers  being  for  the  most  Part  dis- 
ordered and  verie  Licentious,  will  violentlie  draw  from  the  poor 
Husbandman  that  which  shou'd  sustain  himself  and  his  Familie, 
and  so  doth  dailie  drive  him  to  begg,  or  if  the  Souldier  be  res- 
treyned  which  seldom  falleth  out,  he  perisheth  for  want  of  Food, 
of  both  which  these  last  years  hath  given  infinit  Examples,  and 
it  is  to  be  feared  that  if  the  Cornes  be  burnt  up  this  Winter  that 
there  will  be  little  Sowing  of  Summer  Corn  this  year,  and  con- 
sequentlie  a  dearth  and  plague,  which  comonlie  followeth  dearth, 
the  next  year. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  KILDARE. 

This  Countie  hath  Dublin  to  the  East,  Catherlogh  to  the 
South,  the  Kings  and  Ouenes  Counties  to  the  West,  and  Meath 
to  the  North.  It  reacheth  no  where  the  Sea ;  in  it  are  no 
Townes  of  importance,  saving  Castledermott  and  Athie,  which 
hath  been  walled  but  now  ruined,  and  the  Townes  of  Kildare, 
Kilcullen,  Naas,  Leslip,  and  Maynooth,  the  principall  fors  of  the 
Earles  of  Kildare  with  other  Scattered  Villages.3  It  hath  many 
Fayre  Castles  and  Houses. 

The  Castle  of  Kildare,  j  the  Earks  of  Kildare> 

Castle  of  Maynooth,      J 

S'-  Wolstans,  a  Hous  belonging  to  Mr-  Allen, 

The  Castle  of  Leslip  belonging  to  Mr-  Whyte, 

a  '  Divers  proper  villages  lie  scattered  about  the  cuntrie,'  says  Dymmok,  who 
dispatches  the  county  of  Kildare  in  four  lines. 


COUNTIE  OF  KILDARE.  45 

S1-  Kathrens  a  Hous  belonging  to  him,  also 

Lecagh  a  Castle  belonging:  to  one  of  the  Geraldines, 

Kilkea  a  Hous  of  the  Earles  of  Kildare, 

Woodstock  a  Castle  of  the  Earle  of  Kildares, 

Castle  martin  belonging  to  Mr-  Eustace, 

Carberie  belonging  to  one  Coolie, 

Domfert  to  oneb  ....   Reban  belonging  to  Henrie  Lee, 

Mottinsey, 

Monasterevan  or  the  pleasant  Abbey,  belonging  to  the  L. 
Cromwells, 

Baltinglass  belonging  to  Sr-  Henry  Harrington,  sometyme 
the  chief  Hous  of  the  Viscount  Baltinglass,B 

Rathangan  a  Castle  of  the  Earle  of  Kildares,  latelie  raysed 
by  the  Rebells, 

Rathcoffy,c 

Tipper  a  hous  belonging  to  one  Sutton, 

Osberts  Toune  belonging  to  one  FitzGerrald. 

b  To  one  Bremingham. — See  infra.  B  The  monastery  of  Baltinglass, 
In  the  church  of  Dunfierth  near  Enfield,  founded  by  McMorogh  in  1148,  was 
there  is,  or  was  not  long  ago,  a  sepul-  granted,  with  its  manor  and  castle,  to 
chral  effigy  carved  in  high  relief,  re-  Sir  Th.  Eustace  in  1541  ;  his  grandson, 
presenting  a  knight  in  complete  plate  the  third  Viscount  Baltinglass,  confed- 
armour;  round  the  neck  was  suspended  erated  with  the  OByrnes,  and  with  them 
by  a  chain  a  large  crucifix — according  to  slew  800  English  at  the  battle  of  Glen- 
tradition  it  represents  one  of  the  Ber-  malure,  in  1580;  after  the  defeat  of 
minghams.  Elizabeth  wrote  to  the  Desmond  in  1583,  he  retired  to  Spain 
Council,  Nov.  1599:  'What  will  be  the  and  his  lands  were  confiscated.  His 
answer  of  the  traitor  (O'Neil)  for  the  brother  William's  descendant,  C.  S. 
last  treason  of  the  bridge  where  Es-  Eustace,  Esq.,  of  Robertstown,  claims 
mond's  company  was  defeated,  and  the  title. — See  O 'Sullivan  Sere's  Hist. 
what  reason  will  he  yield  for  usurping  Cath.,  Lewis's  Top.  Diet,  Burke's  Peer- 
so  unjustly  in  the  time  of  the  Cessation  age. 

to  place  Bremingham  in  the  county  of         c  Belonging  to    Wogan. — See   infra 

Kildare.' — Car.  Cat.,  Nov.  6,  1599.  and  the  Car.  Cal. 


46 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Principal  men*  in  this  Cotmtie  are  : 

Gerrote  Earle  of  Kildare,  Long  of  the  Dour, 

David  Sutton, 

Fitz  Gerrald  of  Allen, 

Flatesburie  of  Johnston, 

Fitzgerrald  of  Osbertston, 

Edwd-  Fitz  James  of  Blackball, 


Eustace  of  Castlemartin, 
Barnet  of  Reban,  called  S'- 

Michell  now  belonging-  to 

Hen.  Lee, 
Wolf  of  Benford, 


d  The Clongowes  MS.  gives  58  names; 
the  Car.  Cal.  contains  only  35 — from 
both  we  gather  the  names  of  72  gentle- 
men, of  whom  13  were  FitzGeralds,  8 
Eustaces,  4  Berminghams,  and  4 
Aylmers.  The  only  remaining  repre- 
sentatives of  any  of  these  seventy-two 
gentlemen  are  the  Duke  of  Leinster, 
FitzGerald  of  Geraldine,  Eustace  of 
Ballymore-Eustace,  the  Aylmers  (for- 
merly) of  Lyons,  of  Donadea,  of  Pains- 
town,  and  of  Courtown. — See  Walforcts 
County  Families. 

e  This  name  would  show  that  our 
'Description'  was  written  before  1585, 
or  in  or  after  1599  ;  since  Gerot  E.  of 
Kildare  died  in  1585,  and  the  next  of 
the  name  of  Gerot  got  the  title  in  1599. 
The  former  Garret  was  some  time  a 
prisoner  in  the  Tower.  His  son  Henry, 
who  had  married  a  d.  of  the  Earl  of 
Nottingham,  enjoyed  the  title  until 
1 597-  'The  L.  Deputy,  having  taken 
the  fort  of  Blackwater,  was  with  the 
whole  army  rendering  thanks  to  God'; 
the  Irish  interrupted  their  prayers,  and 
in  the  conflict  killed  '  Sir  F.  Vaughan, 
the  L.  Deputy's  brother-in-law ;  R. 
Turner,  the  Serjant  Major  of  the  Army; 


and  two  foster-brothers  of  the  E.  of 
Kildare,  who,  with  his  troop  of  Horse 
served  valiantly  upon  the  Rebells,  and 
tooke  the  death  of  his  foster  brothers 
so  to  heart  (after  the  education  of  the 
Irish)  as  shortly  after  he  died.  Many 
also  were  wounded  of  whom  T.  Walker 
was  of  chiefe  name.' — Moryso/i.  O'Neil 
in  his  letter  to  the  King  of  Spain 
writes  :  '  Kildare  was  hurt  and  died  of 
his  hurt;'  but  Carew  wrote  in  the  mar- 
gin, 'a  lie;  he  died  of  no  hurt.'  O'Sul- 
livan-Bere  says:  '  Kildare  was  unhorsed 
by  push  of  pike,  and  was  wounded ;  but 
was  put  on  horseback  again  by  his  two 
Irish  foster-brothers,  named  O'Hickey, 
who  were  killed  while  saving  him. 
Kildare  died  a  few  days  afterwards.' 
The  Four  Masters  say  that  '  in  conse- 
quence of  a  wound  or  of  a  fever  he 
went  homewards,  and  died  at  Drogheda 
and  his  brother  William  was  installed 
in  his  place.  William  with  eighteen 
chiefs  of  Meath  and  Fingall  was 
drowned  coming  from  England,'  in 
1598;  and  'his  kinsman  Garret,  the 
son  of  Edward,  son  of  Garret,  son  of 
Thomas,  son  of  John  Cam  succeeded.' 
He  was  14th  Earl,  and  with  a  dispen- 


COUNTIE  OF  KILDARE. 


47 


Baronet/  of  the  Noraghe, 
Eustace  of  Blackrath, 
Sutton  of  Tipper, 
Eustace6  of 
Rochfort  of  Laraghes, 
Fitzgerrald  of  Dunor, 
Owgan  of  Newhall, 
Eustace  of  Mulahasse, 


Sherlock  of  the  Naas, 
Owgan  ofh 

Fitzgerrald  of  Leccaghe, 
Young  of  Newton, 
Browne  of  Browneston, 
Fount  of  Founteston, 
Pipard  of 
Young  of  Youngstone, 


sation  from  the  Pope,  married  his 
second  cousin  Elizabeth  who  was  a  d. 
of  the  14th  Baron  of  Delvin  and  was 
born  in  the  Tower  of  London.  This 
Garret,  according  to  O'Sullivan,  was 
poisoned  by  the  English  in  16 12. 

f  Wesley  or  Wellesly  was  Baronet 
of  the  Noragh.  The  Car.  Cal.  has 
'  Wesley  at  the  Norragh '  in  Kildare ; 
and  again,  '  Garrat  Westie  (Wesley  ?) 
of  the  Dengin  '  in  Meath.  The  Wes- 
leys  of  the  Dangan  came  to  Ireland  in 
1 172,  and  are  ancestors  of  the  Duke  of 
Wellington  through  Alison  Wesley  of 
Dangan,  who  was  married  to  Sir  Henry 
Colley  and  died  in  1597.  Among 
those  pardoned  by  the  English  govern- 
ment in  1598  was  R.  Wesley;  and  in 
1 600  '  Walter  Wesley  of  the  Narrowe,' 
co.  of  Kildare,  and  Richard  Wesley. — 
See  Morrin  s  Cal.  of  Close  Rolls,  ad  an. 
1598  and  1600. 

g  There  are  five  Eustaces  in  our 
MS.  ;  but  this  Eustace,  mentioned  with- 
out the  name  of  his  place,  may  be  '  E. 
at  Newlande,  E.  at  Cradockstowne,  E. 
at  Coffy,  or  E.  at  Clangloswoodd.' 
This   is  clearly   Clongoweswood  near 


Clane,  to  which  our  MS.  belongs. — 
See  Car.  Cal. ,  Peramb.  of  the  Pale,  p. 
191. 

"Wogan  of  Rathcoffy.— Car.  Cal 
This  family  produced  some  remarkable 
men,  of  whom  the  Editor  of  this  book 
published  an  account  some  years  ago. 
John  Wogan  was  twice  ruler  of  Ire- 
land in  the  14th  century;  R.  Wogan 
was  High  Chancellor  in  1443;  Colonel 
Wogan  of  Rathcofty  saved  the  King's 
life  at  the  battle  of  Nazeby  ;  young 
Captain  Wogan's  enterprising  character 
has  been  drawn  by  Clarendon,  and  by 
Walter  Scott  in  Waverley.  Sir  Charles 
Wogan  of  Rathcoffy,  a  near  kinsman 
of  the  aforesaid  colonel  and  nephew 
of  Talbot  Duke  of  Tirconnell,  a  Roman 
Patrician  and  Senator,  and  Colonel  in 
the  Spanish  Army,  'with  but  1400  men 
held  out  for  four  hours  against  20,000, 
losing  half  his  soldiers,  and  thus  secured 
a  victory  and  conquest  for  the  Prince 
he  served.'  He  was  one  of  the  most 
dashing  and  daring  men  of  his  day,  and, 
with  the  help  of  three  Irish  officers,  he 
rescued  Maria  Sobieski  from  an  Aus- 
trian fortress  and  brought  her  safe  to 


48 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Creaff  of  Thomaston, 
Wale  of 
Elmer1  of  Lions, 
Allen  of  S'-  Wolstanes, 
Allen  of  Kilheele, 
Weslie  of  Barringstone, 
Fitzgerrald  of  Brecaston, 
Fitzeerrald  of  Breton, 
Whytek  of  Sherlockstone, 
Fitzgerrald  of  Kilune, 
Fitzgerrald  of  the  Grange, 
Bremingham  of  Doinfert, 
Bremingham  of  Corrikeris, 
Bremingham  of  the  Graunge, 

Rome  to  the  Pretender,  whose  fiancee 
she  was.     All  Europe  wondered  at  this 
exploit,    and    the    Duke    of  Wharton 
complimented  him  on  it  thus  : 
'  Great  in  your  verse  as  on  the  martial 

scene, 
Whose  essay  was   to   free  a  captive 

Queen.' 

''  Also  Aylmer  at  Clancurry,  Aylmer 
at  Downada,  and  Aylmer  at  Hardwell. 
—  Car.  Cal.  The  head  of  the  Aylmer 
family  and  representative  of  the  Aylmers 
of  Lyons  is  Michael  Valentine  Aylmer, 
Esq.,  Deny,  Rathcabbin,  co. Tipperary. 
'  Aylmer  of  Downada,'  the  ancestor  of 
Sir  Gerald  G.  Aylmer  of  Donadea  Cas- 
tle, was  son  of  A.  of  Cloncurrie,  and 
grandson  of  A.  of  Lyons.  His  lady 
was  the  widow  of  Viscount  Baltinglass 

k  'and  Whyte  of  Leixlip'— Car.  Cal. 


BreminoTiam  of  Rosewood, 
Misset  of  Dowdingleston, 
Calf  of  Duriforth, 
Fleming  of  the  Naas, 
Golding  of  Harberston, 
Eustace  of  Ballecotlan, 
Dongan  of  Fontistone, 
Cowley1  of  Carberrie, 
Sr  Edward  Fitzgerald,™  Knt., 
Walshes  of  Morten, 
Stanihurst  of  Ballincapoch, 
Buggon  of  Rathmore, 
H  owlet  of  Rathmore, 
Row  of  Branganston, 

'  at  Carbry  Castle.'— Car.  Cal.  He 
was  the  direct  ancestor  of  Wellington. 
He  was  grandson  of  Walter  Colley, 
Solicitor-General  and  then  Surveyor- 
General  for  Ireland.  In  1595,  as  ap- 
pears from  Sir  W.  Russell's  Journal, 
'  the  L.  Deputy  went  to  the  Nasse  (Mr. 
Coolie's)  ;  also  in  April,  that  year, 
Lieut.  Greemes  brought  in  one  Hall,  a 
priest,  taken  at  the  Lady  Colie's  house ; 
he  was  committed  close  prisoner  to  the 
Castle  of  Dublin.' 

ra  Also,  '  FitzGerald  at  Castle  Iskin, 
F.  at  Ballysonan,  and  F.  at  Dunnocks.' 
To  which  may  be  added  from  the  Car. 
Cal.,  'Allie  at  Rathbrede,  Beling  at 
Killussy,  Cheevers  at  Rathmore,  Sir 
Wm-  Sarsfield  at  Tully,  Sarsfield  at 
Turning,  Herbert  at  Collanstowne,  Sir 
H.  Warren  at  Castletowne,  and  Sir 
Harry  Harrington  at  Golmoorstowne.' 


COUNTIE  OF  KILDARE. 


49 


Fitzphillips  of  Clain, 
Branaghe  of  Leslip, 
Fyan  of  Leslip, 


Tyrrell  of  Ardchille, 
Delahide  of  Moyglare. 


Few  of  this  Countie"  are  yet  entered  into  action  of  Rebel- 
lion, saving  some  younger  Brethren  of  the  Geraldines  that 
followed  Thomas,  base  Brother  of  this  Earle  of  Kildare's,  into 
Rebellion,  who  was  apprehended  and  Executed  by  the  Earle  of 


n  '  Touching  the  five  shires  of  the 
English  Pale,  though  many  of  them 
have  showed  more  backwardness  to 
answer  the  service  and  their  own  de- 
fence than  were  meet,  which,  we  think, 
groweth  more  upon  their  poor  estate 
and  waste  of  their  countries,  than  of 
any  wilfulness  or  corrupt  mind;  yet  in 
many  of  the  meaner  sort,  upon  the  bor- 
ders towards  the  North  and  the  co.  of 
Kildare  some  of  the  Bastard  Garral- 
dines,  especially  two  base  brothers  of 
the  now  Earl  of  Kildare  are  in  open 
rebellion  with  two  of  the  Eustaces.' — ■ 
State  of  Ireland  in  1597.  '  Kildare  is 
for  the  most  part  spoiled,  wasted  and 
consumed  by  burning  or  otherwise, 
save  some  castles,  where  the  owners  do 
shroud  themselves  from  the  rebels. 
This  waste  has  been  caused  by  the  in- 
cursions of  the  rebels,  the  daily  out- 
rages and  disorders  of  the  soldiers  and 
the  burthens  imposed  by  the  governors, 
the  Council  and  the  commanders.' — 
Car.  Cal.,p.  260.  'Two  base  brethren  of 
the  Earl  of  Kildare,  called  the  Bastard 
Geraldines,  having  drawn  to  them  a 
number  of  loose  people,  do  range  up 
and  down  the    Pale,   extorting   meat, 


drink  and  money  at  their  own  wills,  and 
so  terrify  the  subjects  as  many  do  for- 
sake their  dwellings.  These  Bastard 
Geraldines  are  now  upon  protection, 
and  what  will  further  come  of  them  we 
know  not,  having  often  written  to  the 
Earl  of  Kildare  to  temper  with  them 
and  to  stay  them,  but  we  have  not  as 
yet  heard  anything  from  him.' — Report 
of  the  Dublin  Council,  5th  Nov.  1597. 
'  In  Kildare  James  Fitz  Piers  a  Geral- 
dine,  Sheriff  of  the  shire,  the  two  Bas- 
tard Geraldines,  one  (some)  of  the 
Delahydes,  Glashane  O'Dempsie,  and 
Lisaghe  O'Dempsie  with  the  rest  of  the 
O'Dempsies,  and  certain  of  the  Eus- 
taces of  kindred  to  (of  the  sept  of)  the 
late  Viscount  Baltinglasse  attainted  are 
in  actual  rebellion ;  their  forces  are 
230  f.  and  30  h.  (220  f.  and  30  h.).' — 
Car.  Cal.,  State  of  Ireland,  April  1599/ 
but  the  words  in  parenthesis  are  from 
Moryson. 

The  Queen's  troops  in  Kildare  were : 
'  Horse, — in  and  about  the  Nasse  :  Earl 
of  Kildare,  50  ;  Capt.  R.  Greame,  50  ; 
Capt.  Gifford,  25  ;  Capt.  Lee,  12. 
Foote, — in  and  about  the  Nasse  were  : 
Earl  of  Kildare,   150;    Earl  of  South- 

G 


5o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Ormond.  These,  becaus  they  have  no  head  of  themselves  and 
are  but  few,  they  abide  out  of  their  owne  countrie  amongst 
Strangers,  and  serve  onlie  for  Guyders  to  Lead  others  through 
the  Countrie.0 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  CATHELAGH. 


This  Countie  is  a  long  slip  of  Land  lying  for  the  most  part 
between  the  2  Rivers  Slaine  and  Barrowe,  and  contayneth  divers 
Baronies  ancientle  inhabited  by  the  Inglyshe,  but  not  long  after 
the  conquest  a  good  part  thereof  was  recovered  by  the  Cavan- 
aghs,  which  did  inhabit  both  it  and  the  Countie  of  Wexford.a 


ampton,  200;  Sir  M.  Morgan,  150; 
Sir  T.  Loftus,  100;  Williams,  150; 
Esmond,  150;  W.  McEdmond,  100 ; 
E.  Loftus,  100;  Lea,  100;  Eustace, 
100;  J.  Masterson,  100;  Flood,  100; 
Trevor,  100. '• — Moryson,  p.  43. 

0  The  following  Kildare  worthies 
were  pardoned  in  1598  and  1600,  so  I 
presume  they  aided  the  '  Geraldines  ' : 
'  Piers  Walshe  Fitz  Piers  of  Moynally, 
and  Howel  Walshe;  Wm-  Fitz  Oliver 
FitzGerald  ;  R.  Fitz  Maurice  Fitz  G. ; 
W.  Fitz  Maurice  Fitz  G. ;  W.  Fitz  Ed- 
ward Fitz  G.,  W"-  Bremingham  of 
Uunfert ;  E.  Bremingham  of  Derite ; 
R  Bremingham  Fitz  James ;  Garret 
Bremingham  Fitz  Redmond;  Richard 
Mac  William  Oge  Bremingham  of 
Muckland,  Cecily  Linch  his  wife,  W°- 
B.  his  son,  and  Piers  Fitz  James  Brem- 
ingham, Gerald  Wogan  of  the  Down- 
ings  ;  R.  Wesley,  Walter  Wesley  of  the 


Narrowe ;  Wm-  Eustace  of  Castlemartin ; 
Christopher  Eustace  of  Ballycallen  and 
Ellinor  his  wife  ;  Thomas  Rochford  of 
the  Laragh  ;  Donal  Enos  and  Wm- 
Moony  of  the  Laroghs  ;  Sir  W"1,  Sars- 
field  of  Lucan;  Christopher  Flattesburie 
of  Johnstown  ;  Carroll,  Boylan,  and 
Ashe  of  the  Naas  ;  Keatinge,  Doyne, 
Gilliglas  O'Scott,  Brenan,  Morogh 
O'Hanlon,  O'Conlan,  D.  O'Byrne,  H. 
O'Byrne,  O'Kellie,  Coffie,  O'Halegan, 
O'Donnell,  Tallen,  O'Rhawley;'— See 
Morrins  Cal.  of  Close  Rolls. 

a  The  Cavanaghs  held  the  strong 
mountain  fastnesses  lying  between  the 
Counties  of  Wexford  and  Carlow,  and 
extending  down  the  left  bank  of  the 
Barrow  to  the  neighbourhood  of  New 
Ross.  In  the  description  accompany- 
ing Speed's  Maps  we  read  :  '  Cavcnaghi 
hie  {i.e.,  in  Carlow)  circumquaque  agunt, 
in  numerosam  familiam  propagati — viri 


COUNTIE  OF  CATHLAGH. 


51 


It  hath  in  it  certan  high  mountains  upon  the  East  part  and  the 
rest  of  the  Countrie  is  nere  plain.  The  third  part  of  the  whole 
Shyre  is  accompted  to  belong  to  the  Earle  of  Ormond  and  his 
brother  Sr  Edmond  Butler.  One  baronie  called  Idrone  was  the 
ancient  Inheritance  of  Sr  Peter  Carew.b 

This  Countie  is  bounded  with  the  Countie  of  Kildare  to  the 
North,  with  the  Ouene's  Countie  to  the  West  and  Southwest, 
and  Kilkenny  to  the  East  and  Southeast.  It  hath  onlie  one 
Towne  called  Catherlaghe,  from  which  the  Shyre  hath  its  name. 


Principall 
Castles  are : — 


Catherlaghe, 
Leighlin, 
Rathvilley, 
Fortovollon,c 


Tully, 

Sl  Mollins, 

Cloughgrenan, 

Rathmore. 


bell ko si,  sed  qui  per  mutuas  clades  se 
quotidie  conficiunt.'  Circa  1568  five 
Cavanaghs  owned  Idrone  East.  In 
1587  Murtagh  C.  chief  of  his  name, 
dwelt  at  Garryhill,  though  his  chief 
house  was  the  Castle  of  Rathnegarry 
in  Idrone.  As  he  was  wantonly  mur- 
dered by  Dudley  Bagnall's  men  in 
1587,  his  two  sons  made  a  raid  on 
Bagnall's  land,  plundered  it,  and  being 
pursued,  killed  Bagnall  and  thirteen  of 
his  men,  inflicted  on  him  sixteen 
wounds,  drew  his  tongue  out  of  his 
mouth  and  slit  it. — Kilk.  Arch.  Jour, 

Three  years  afterwards  Hugh  O'Don- 
nell  was  helped  to  escape  from  the 
Castle  by  '  a  certain  renowned  warrior 
of  Leinster,  Art  Cavanagh  by  name, 
who  was  a  champion  in  battle  and  a 
commander  in  conflict.' — Four  Masters. 
Belonging  to  Sir  Dudley  Bagnoll. — 


Dymmok.  In  the  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch., 
April  1870,  the  Rev.  J.  Hughes  gives 
an  account  of  this  barony,  from  which 
we  take  the  following  details  :  The 
ninth  Earl  of  Ormonde  purchased  the 
Dullogh  and  gave  it  to  his  son  Sir 
Edward  Butler.  Carew  claimed  it  in 
right  of  his  ancestors  and  in  1568  got 
possession  of  Idrone  from  the  Sheriff  of 
Carlow.  Sir  Edward,  who  had  done 
great  service  against  the  O'Mores,  re- 
belled, and  after  holding  out  for  some 
time  was  pardoned  in  1573.  He  had 
four  sons,  one  of  whom  succeeded  to 
the  father's  estates  in  1603,  got  the  title 
of  Viscount  Tullophelim,  and  married 
the  only  daughter  of  his  uncle  Ormond, 
but  died  without  issue. 

c  '  In  the  co.  of  Catherlagh,  being 
little  and  all  wasted,  the  castles  of  Car- 
logh  and  Laghline,  and  her  Majesty's 


52 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Principall 

Gentlemen : — 


Sr  Edmond  Butlerd 
Dudley  Bagnoll'se  sons 


house  of  Femes,  held  by  the  Queene's 
Warders,  and  six  castles  belonging  to 
the  Earl  of  Ormond  held  for  the 
Queene,  but  the  Cavanaghs  and  Key- 
tons  were  in  rebellion.' — Moryson,  p. 

'  The  Earl  of  Ormonde's  chief  manor 
there  is  Ravelly,  and  his  territories 
reach  along  Clonmore  and  Fortanolan 
to  Arclow.' — Car.  Cat.  The  Fothart 
O'Nolan,  or  country  of  O'Nolan  is  now 
the  barony  of  Forth  in  the  co.  of  Car- 
low.  O'Flaherty  in  his  Ogygia,  p.  iii., 
c.  64,  says  O'Nolan  the  last  proprietor 
and  chief  of  this  territory  died  a  short 
time  before  O'Flaherty  wrote  his  book, 
so  there  must  have  been  a  chief  of  that 
name  in  1598.  O'Heerin  thus  sings  of 
the  chief  in  his  time  : 

'  O'Nuallain,  hero  without  fault 
Chief  prince,  fine   and   bountiful   of 
Fothart.' 

O'N.  was  senior  Vassal  of  McMurrogh  ; 
'  O'N.,  the  Lord  of  Fotharta  was  slain 
in  1133;  his  son  was  slain  in  1154; 
Shan  O'N.  was  chief  of  Fogharta  in 
1394;  and  in  1406  Laighsech  O'N. 
the  royal  heir  of  Foghart  died.'— See 
Four  Masters  and  Annals  of  Loch  Ce. 

d  Sir  Edmond  Butler  of  Cloghgren- 
nan,  was  brother  of  Ormond,  and  is 
called  Edmond  an  Caladh  (of  the 
Port)  by  the  Four  Masters.  In 
1569  this  Edmond  and  his  brother 
Edward  '  seized  at  the  fair  of  Eniscor- 


thy,  on  Great  Lady  Day,  an  immense 
quantity  of  property — horses,  cattle, 
gold,  silver  and  foreign  goods ;  but 
Ormond  having  returned  made  peace 
for  his  Kinsmen  with  the  State.'  In 
1582,  these  brothers  with  their  cavalry, 
galloglasses,  and  giomanachs  were  de- 
feated by  the  Earl  of  Desmond.  In 
1596  this  Edmond,  son  of  James,  son 
of  Pierce  Roe,  son  of  James,  son  of 
Edmond,  son  of  Richard  Butler,  was 
imprisoned  for  the  crimes  of  his  sons 
who  turned  out  to  plunder.' — See  Four 
Masters.  In  1596  the  Lord  Deputy 
wrote  to  him  :  '  Your  son,  Pierse  But- 
ler, hath  received  a  commandment  to 
come  to  us,  and  yet  hath  obstinately 
refused  to  do  so  :  these  are  therefore  to 
will  and  command  you  to  apprehend 
him  and  deliver  him  to  his  uncle,  the 
Earl  of  Ormonde.'  In  the  month  ot 
December  1596,  the  heads  of  his  son 
James  and  two  others  were  sent  to  the 
Deputy;  and  in  1597  his  son  Pierse 
was  taken  and  executed  by  his  own 
uncle  Ormond,  who  sent  his  head  to 
Dublin. — See  Car.  Cat. 

e  Sir  W.  S'-  Leger  was  governor  of 
the  fort  of  Leighlin,  had  150  men,  and 
was  guardian  of  Dudley  Bagnall's  son, 
who  owned  Idrone  Barony. — Car.  Cat., 
p.  191.  Dudley's  brother,  Marshal  B. 
owned  the  premises  and  castle  of 
Leighlin  Bridge  until  his  defeat  and 
death  by  O'Neil  in  1598.  Dudley's 
son,  Sir  Nicholas  B.  was  constable  of 


COUNTIE  OF  CATHLAGH. 


53 


Sr  William  Harpolef 
The  Heirs  of  Henry  Dowels 
Edmond  Gline 

Turloghe  McDonnell  Galliglass 
The  Bishop  of  Laghlein,  the  Sonnes  of  Bryan  McCawer 

Cavanaghg  of  S'  Molins 


the  Castle  of  Leighlin  in  1602.  Dud- 
ley's grandson,  Colonel  Walter  B.  had 
an  Irish  mother,  who  was  d.  of  the  nth 
Earl  of  Ormond  ;  he  was  a  Catholic, 
and  though  a  Confederate  officer,  he 
allowed  Ormond's  army  to  pass  Leigh- 
lin Bridge  and  thus  enabled  Ormond 
to  escape  from  Owen  Roe.  He  was 
tried  for  '  murder '  by  the  Parliament- 
arians, was  put  to  death  in  1652  ;  his 
property  of  15,000  acres  in  Idrone  was 
confiscated,  as  he  was  '  an  Irish  papist] 
and  his  brother  Colonel  Thomas  Bag- 
nail  was  '  transplanted'  into  Connaught 
as  '  an  Irish  papist] — See  the  papers 
published  by  Mr.  Prendergast  in  Kilk. 
Arch.  J.  of  i860. 

'  Perhaps  a  son  of  Hartpole,  con- 
stable of  Catherlogh  who  died  in  1594, 
aged  70,  whose  effigial  tomb  was  found 
many  years  ago  in  the  cemetery  of  S'' 
Mary,  Castle  Hill,  Carlow.  '  He  was 
matched  with  a  Coltyonean  (i.e.,  an 
O'Birne)  and  was  a  maintainer  of 
rebels.' — Survey  of  Ireland  in  1572 
and  1602.  The  Car.  Cal.  mentions  a 
William  Wall ;  who,  I  presume,  was  of 
the  Carlow  family  of  Wall  that  after- 
wards rose  to  some  eminence  in  France. 
The  Survey  of  Ireland  circa  1575  and 
circ.   1602  says,  '  there  are  in  Carloe 


Keating's  kerne  ill-disposed  and  now 
rebels.' 

e  '  Garret  McMurtagh  Cavanagh, 
Morgan  McBrian  Cavanagh  at  Poble 
Tymolin.' — Car.  Cal.,  p.  191. 

According  to  the  Cavanagh  Pedigree 
in  the  Kilk.  Arch,  foumalof  July  1856, 
Donnell  Spaineach  fl.  1600,  attainted 
an.  1617,  was  father  of  Sir  Murrough 
M'Morrough  ;  Morgan,  son  of  Brian  of 
Borris  (who  died  in  1572)  d.  1636;  his 
great  grandson  was  governor  of  Prague 
in  1766;  Murtogh  attainted  in  1605  ; 
Dowling  Cavanagh  of  Ballyleigh  lived 
in  1598  ;  Art  McMorrough  Kavanagh  of 
Borris  is  the  7  th  in  descent  from  Mor- 
gan of  Borris  who  died  in  1636. 

The  '  Sects  of  the  Cavanaghes  in 
Carloe:  (1)  Morchage  of  Garlile  [Gar- 
ryhill — Ed.]  chief  of  that  sect.  (2) 
Gerard  McCahairCarragh  of  Glennmulle 
[Clonolyn — Ed.]  chief  of  another.  (3) 
Cahir  Begge  of  Leinerocke  chief  of 
another  sect.  (4)  Bryan  McMurtagh 
of  the  country  of  the  Melaghe,  chief  of 
another  sect.  (5)  Bryan  McCahir 
McArte,  dwelling  in  the  barony  of  S'' 
Malyne,  between  Sir  Peter  Carew  and 
Rosse  on  the  river  of  Barrouglie — all 
open  rebels  or  doubtful ;  and  Bryan 
McCahir  McArte,  a  notable  rebel,  who 


54 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Hugh 

Owen  O'Gormoghan 

John  Barrie. 


killed  Browne  in  1572,  with  a  number 
of  other  good  gentlemen  of  Wexford. 
The  Coltyoneans  alias  Byrnes  notable 
rebels ;  all  the  rest  faithful  to  her 
Majesty.  Wm.  McHubberd,  chief  of 
these  hanged  in  1602.  There  are  10 
septs  of  the  Kavanaghes,  i.e. :  (1)  Gerald 
M'Moridaghe  Oge  of  Slught  Mori- 
taughe;  he  is  upon  protection;  his  sept 
in  rebellion  ;  his  house  Rathengerge  in 
O'Dorne.  (2)  Brian  McDonoghe  (both 
of  these  are  of  Slewght  Morrogh  Bal- 
laghe),  upon  protection  ;  his  house 
Castle  Balliboghare  in  O'Dorne.  (3) 
Morietaghe  McDonogh,  dead  ;  his  sept 
in  rebellion.  (4)  Morietagh  McMorish 
in  rebellion  ;  both  these  septs  are  of 
Slewght  Ayte  More ;  both  these  men's 
lands  in  O'Dorne.  (5)  Dowghe  McCahir 
in  rebellion  ;  his  house  was  the  castle 
of  Fenes.  (6)  Donell  McDowghe  alias 
Donell  Spanaghe  in  rebellion  ;  his  chief 
house  was  Huysceethy.  (7)  Dermond 
McMorish  a  pensioner  in  pay  ;  his  sept 
in  rebellion ;  those  three  septs  are  of 
Slewght  Donell  Reaghe  ;  his  pension 
in  Kilkennin  in  Wexford.  (8)  Morogh 
McBrian  upon  protection  ;  his  sept  in 
rebellion  ;  he  is  of  Slewght  Dermond 
Langrett ;  his  land  in  S'-  Nolin  in 
Wexford.  (9)  Moroghe  Leighe  McCahir 
dead  ;  his  sept  in  rebellion  ;  he  is  of 
Slewght  Art  More ;  his  land  in  S'- 
Nolin  in  Wexford.' — Suri'ey  of  Ireland, 


written  circ.  1574,  with  additions  circ. 
1597  and  1602.  Car.  Cal.  in  year 
1603.  p.  447. 

'In  1597  there  were  some  of  the 
Butlers  who  range  up  and  down  the 
borders  of  Carlowe  having  of  their 
adherancy  some  of  the  Connaughts 
{sic.  perhaps  bonnaughts — Ed.)  and 
sundry  of  the  O'Tooles  and  OByrnes.' 
— State  of  Ireland,  Car.  Cal. 

'  In  1599  most  of  the  Cos.  of  Carlow 
and  Wexford  were  in  rebellion ;  the 
chief  in  these  two  counties  are  the 
Kevanaghes,  who  with  their  followers 
are  750  men  and  whereof  50  are  horse.' 
— Moryson  and  Car.  Cal. 

In  a  tract  of  the  British  Museum, 
written  by  Nowel,  Dean  of  Lichfield, 
who  died  in  1576,  the  power  of  the 
Carlow  Irish  in  his  time  is  thus  stated: 
'  McMurghowe  is  prince  of  Leinster. 
He  and  his  Kinsmen  will  be  200  horse 
well  harnessed,  a  bataile  (i.e.,  about 
80)  of  Galoglas  and  300  kerne — his  ; 
O'Moroghowe  1.  of  Yphelim  16  h.  and 
40  k.  ;  O'Nowlane  L.  of  Tohyrly  12  h. 
and  20  k.  ;  O'Brenan  of  Idough  40 
keme.'  A  later  paper,  circ.  1572,  men- 
tions as  of  estimation  the  Cavanaghs  of 
'  S1,  Molyns,  of  Garryhill  and  Clono- 
lyn  ;  but  none  of  them  able  to  make 
8  horsemen  of  his  own  byinge,  and 
every  one  of  them  is  enemy  to  the 
other.' 


COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD.  55 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD. 

This  Countie  being  the  first  conquered  by  the  Inglysh  men, 
hath  so  much  written  in  several  Books  now  extant,  as  it  were 
superfluous  to  speak  more  of  this  Shyre,  than  of  the  present 
State  thereof.  Sr  Henrie  Sidney  and  Sr  William  Drury  caused 
it  to  be  Surveyed,  and  had  a  meaning  to  have  it  divided  into 
Two  Shyres,  and  to  have  called  the  North  part  the  Countie  of 
fearnes  as  the  south  part  the  Countie  of  Wexford,  but  for  want 
of  Sufficient  Freeholders  to  be  of  Juries,  or  to  be  Sheriffe, 
or  to  bear  any  other  Office,  this  purpose  of  Division  took  no 
Effecte. 

This  Shyre  serveth  to  be  an  Inglyshe  Pale,  and  an  Irish 
Countie.  The  Pale  or  civill  part  is  contayned  within  a  River 
called  the  Pill,a  in  the  which  the  most  of  the  posteritie  of  the 
ancient  Gentlemen,  that  were  conquerors  do  inhabite.b  The 
other  without  the  Pill  is  yet  Inhabited  by  the  Originall  people, 

a  Weisford   with  the  territory  baied  as   commonlie  the  inhabitants  of  the 

and  perclosed  within  the  Pill  was  so  meaner  sort  speake  neither  good  Fng- 

quite  estranged  from  Irishrie,  as  if  a  lish  nor  good  Irish. — Stanihursfs  De- 

traveller  of  the   Irish  (which  was  rare  script  ion  of  Ireland. 
in  these  days)    had   pitched  his    foot  b  '  The  mansion  houses  of  most  gen- 

within  the  Pill  and  spoken  Irish,  the  try  were   fortified  with   Castles,   some 

Weisfordians    would     command     him  neere   60  foot  high,    having   walls   at 

forthwith  to  turn  the  other  end  of  his  least  5  foot  thicke  to  the  number  of 

toong,    and   speake    English,    or    else  Thirty,    of   which  few   as   yet   becom 

bring  his  trouchman  with  him.     But  in  ruinous,'  says  one  who  wrote  in  1680. 
our  days  (circa  1578)  they  have  so  ac-  'The  people  of  the  B.  of  Forth  spoke 

quainted  themselves  with  the  Irish  as  the  same  tongue  and  wore  the  same 

that  they  have  made  a  mingle  mangle  dress  and  professed  the  same  Faith  as 

or  gallimanfreie  of  both  the  languages,  the   first   settlers,   their    predecessors. 


56 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1  598. 


as  the  Cavenaghes  and  Kinshelaughes0  possessing  the  Woodie 
part  thereof;  into  which,  notwithstanding,  some  of  the  Inglysh 
have  intruded,  and  planted  Forts  and  Castles  within  them. 

This  Countie  hath  the  Sea  to  the  East,  the  County  of 
Wicklo  to  the  North,  the  Countie  of  Catherlagh  to  the  West 
and  the  River  of  Barrowe  and  the  County  of  Waterfoord  to  the 
South. 

Both  Wexford  and  Rosse  hath  walled  and  Haven  Townes, 
the  first  upon  the  East  Sea,  the  other  upon  the  River  Barow 
being  amplyfied  by  the  Rivers  of  Nuer  and  Suer,  and  the 
mouth  of  the  Haven  is  the  Haven  of  Waterfoord,  yet  hath  it 
other  ancient  ruined  Townes  as  Fearnes  whereof  the  Bishop 
hath  his  name,  Clomyne  B  .  .  .   .  and  Federt. 


In  that  single  barony  there  were  no 
less  than  eighteen  churches,  thirty  three 
chapels,  one  religious  hospital  and  two 
convents,  and  very  many  crosses  in 
public  roads.' — Description  of  B.  of 
Forth,  ed.  by  H.  F.  Hore  in  Kilk.Jour. 
of  Arch.  The  Gentlewomen  of  Wex- 
ford, in  1634,  'wore  good  handsome 
gownes,  petticoates,  and  hatts,'  and  for 
mantles,  had  '  Irishe  ruggs  with  hand- 
some comely  large  fringes,  which  go 
about  their  necks  ;  thick  rugg  fringe 
is  joined  to  a  garment,  which  comes 
round  about  them  and  recheth  to  the 
very  ground  ;  it  is  much  more  comely 
than  the  rugg  short  cloaks  used  by  the 
women  on  festival  days  at  Abbeville 
and  Boulogne.' — Sir  W.  Brcreton. 

c  '  That  part  of  the  county  north  of 
the  river  Slane  is  possessed  chiefly  by 
the  Irish  called  Cavanaghs.  It  hath 
on  that  side  also  many  English  inhabit- 
ants ;  sc.   Synot   of  Clelande,   Roth  of 


Roth,  Synot  of  Ballinerah  in  the  Mur- 
ros  (?),  Masterson  at  Femes  Castle, 
where  also  the  Bishop's  see  is,  Peppard 
of  Glascarrig.' 

'The  Irish  on  that  side  the  Slane  are 
— Donell  Murtagh,  Edmund  O'Morowe 
of 'the  O'Morowes' country,  and  others, 
ever  bad  neighbours  and  rebellious 
people,  under  the  government  of  Wil- 
liam Synot,  by  lease  from  her  Majesty. 
Other  Irish  nations  are  by  east  them  to 
the  sea.  The  countries  are  called  the 
Kinshelaghes,  Kilconelin,  Kilhobock, 
Farinhamon,  inhabited  by  Art  McDer- 
mot,  MTJaMore,  McVadock,  Darby 
McMorish,  all  under  the  government  of 
Mr.  Masterson.  On  the  south-west  of 
the  Slane  are  four  English  baronies 
called  Fort,  Barge,  Sherberre,  and 
Shelmalen,  and  an  Irish  barony  called 
the  Duffree.  In  the  Duffree  dwell  Sir 
H.  Wallop,  and  Lord  Mountgarret.' — 
Car.  CaL,  p.  190. 


COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD. 


57 


The  Principall  Castles  are  : 
belonging     to    the     Adamstone, 


Wexfordd 
Quene, 
Femes  to  the  Bishop, 
Tinterne  to  Sr  Tho.  Code, 
Donbrodie  Abbey, 
Doncannon, 
The  Towre  of  Hooke, 
Ballihack, 


Inishcortie    to    Sir     Henrie 

Wallop, 
Bromestone, 
Rosegarland, 
Old  Crosse, 
Mountgarret,  and 
Kilclogher. 


Principall  Gentlemen  :e 

The  Bishop  of  Fearnes,  Richard  Mastersone, 

Sir  Henrie  Wallop,  Sir  Tho.  Colclough, 

Sir  Dudley  Loftus,  Rochef  of  Rochesland, 


d  'Washfort  was  very  populous  in 
1644,  owing  to  its  great  commerce. 
The  fortress  a  small  square  regularly 
enough  fortified,  at  the  foot  of  which 
were  many  ruins  of  churches ;  the 
people  came  chiefly  from  France.' — 
Boulaye  Le  Gouz1  Travels  in  Ireland  in 
1644. 

'  In  the  co.  of  Wexford,  being  wasted, 
all  the  castles  held  for  the  Queene,  and 
Sir  T.  Colclough,  Sir  R.  Masterson, 
and  Sir  Dudley  Loftus,  the  only  Eng- 
lish there  inhabiting,  held  for  the 
Queene.  But  Donnell  Spaniagh,  alias 
Cavanagh,  with  all  that  Sept,  the 
Omorroghs,  Macony  More,  all  the 
Kinsellaghes,  Dermot  McMorice,  etc 
were  in  rebellion  and  had  750  f.  and 
50  h.  In  1599  there  were  200  f.  at 
Eniscorthy,  under  Sir  Oliver  Lambert, 


and  150  f.  under  Sir  R.  Masterson.— 
Moryson,  p.  43. 

e  An  old  barony  of  Forth  alliterative 
rhyme  conveys  the  supposed  hereditary 
characteristics  of  several  Wexford  fam* 
ilies  : — '  Stiff  Staffort,  Dugget  [dogged] 
Lamport,  Gay  Rochford,  Proud  Dewe- 
ros,  Lacheny  [laughing]  Cheevers, 
Currachy  [obstinate]  Hore,  Criss  [cross] 
Calfer,  Valse  [false]  Furlong,  Shimereen 
[showy]  Synnot,  Gentleman  [gentle] 
Brune.' 

f  Sir  J.  Fitz  George  Roche,  Knt.  was 
summoned  to  the  war  in  Scotland  in 
1335.  The  Roches  of  Roche's  land 
waxed  very  Irish  in  their  ways  ;  for  the 
Wexford  jury  of  1537  'do  present  that 
Walter  R  with  his  followers  went  to 
the  suburbs  of  Wexford  by  night  for  the 
most  part  feloniously,  burned  a  boat  of 

H 


58 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Synnotg  of  Clayland, 

R.  Canton ;  and  burned  a  towne  of 
Wm.  Meyler  and  T.  Synnot  in  ye 
parish  of  Kilkevan ;  and  so  ye  said 
Wm.  and  Thomas  must  give  unto  the 
said  Walter  20s.  to  have  license  to  build 
ye  same  towne ;  that  the  said  Walter 
came  with  a  banner  displayed  of  Irish- 
men, and  took  with  them  ye  prey,  that 
is  to  say,  of  kine  and  cattle  of  the 
towne  of  Wexford ;  and  also  as  yet 
holdeth  an  Irishwoman  to  his  wife.' 

'In  1552  Roche  of  Artramont,  Lord 
of  Rochesland,  wrote  to  the  L.  Deputy 
that  his  father  retained  the  yearly  rents 
of  money,  sheep,  butter,  etc.,  of  the 
tenants  and  dwellers  of  Rathalvey,  and 
that  whenever  any  goods  were  taken  from 
the  tenants  by  the  English  Pale  of  the 
co.  of  Wexford,  being  in  wars  with  the 
Morrowes,  Roche  caused  the  same  to 
be  restored  ;  and  that  the  said  lands 
had  ever  been  freed  from  O'Morrowe's 
galloglasses  and  other  charges.' 

e  '  The  Sinnots  exceed  in  number 
any  ancient  name  ;  the  house  of  Bally- 
brennan  in  Forth  was  the  most  eminent, 
from  which  sprang  men  remarkable  for 
school  learning,  persons  endowed  with 
heroic  spirits  and  martially  disposed 
minds.  Richard  S.  of  Ballybrennan, 
for  his  noble  services  with  his  sons, 
relations  and  dependents,  was  rewarded 
with  forfeited  lands.  His  son  Walter 
being  slain  in  battle,  his  grandson 
Martin  S.  inherited  Ballybrennan ;  his 
son  James  S.  got  the  Manor  and 
Barony  of  Rosegarland,  John  got 
Cooledyne  with   1200  acres;  Nicholas 


FitzHenrie  of  Maghemorne,h 

got  Park,  Logh  and  other  villages  with 
several  houses  in  AVexford ;  Sir  Wm.  S. 
got  Ballyfarnocke  with  24  plowlands 
intire  in  the  Murrowes  ;  Edmond  S.  got 
Lingstown  and  other  villages. 

'  The  following  were  gentlemen  of 
the  name  enjoying  good  estates  for 
many  descents,  from  whom  also  several 
persons  famous  for  learning  and  chiv- 
alry— in  Germany,  France,  Spain  and 
Muscovie,  etc.,  were  extracted. 

'  In  the  Barony  of  Forth — 

'  Sinnot  of  Balligery ;  S.  of  Rath- 
downey;  S.  of  Stonehouse  of  Wexford; 
S.  of  Gratkerock.  In  Ballaghene  Bar- 
ony— S.  of  Owlert,  S.  of  Ballymore, 
S.  of  Garrymusky,  S.  of  Tinraheene. 
In  Shilmaleere — S.  of  Garrymusky,  S. 
of  Owlortvicke,  S.  of  Ballinhownemore, 
S.  of  Ballinvacky,  S.  of  Belleareele,  S. 
of  Balliroe,  S.  of  Ballinkilly,  S.  of 
Monyvilleog,  S.  of  Mogangolie. 

'  These  gentlemen,  compleatly  armed 
and  mounted  on  horsebacke  in  Q. 
Elizabeth's  warrs  vigorously  opposed 
such  as  appeared  Rebellious.' — De- 
scription of  the  Barony  of  Forth,  Edited 
by  H.  F.  Hore. 

h  Maghmayne. —  Ussher  M.S.  Fitz- 
Harris  of  Killkevan  is  given  in  the  Car. 
Cal.  in  which  are  found  only  twelve 
names,  whereas  there  are  fifty  or  sixty  in 
our  MS.  I  fancy  this  is  the  'Feeffarris,  a 
malefactor  matched  with  the  Cavanaghs 
in  Carlow,  and  holding  with  them ;'  he 
is  thus  described  by  the  Survey  of  Ire- 
land, written  between  1575  and  1602. 

In  1537  the  jury  of  New  Ross  '  pre- 


COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD. 


59 


Deverox'  of  Balmagere, 
Foorloncrk  of  Hoorton, 


Browne1  of  Malrancan, 
Haym  of  Tancomshanee, 


sent  that  one  FitzHarry,  that  now  is, 
of  Kilkevan,  robbed  ye  towne  of  Rosse, 
and  killed  a  man  within  ye  liberties  of 
the  said  towne,  and  that  ye  said  Fitz 
Harry  did  take  a  pray  to  the  some  and 
valew  of  ^ioo.' — Annuary  of  Kilk. 
Arch.  Society,  Vol.  i. 

1  The  Devereuxes  were  the  wealthiest 
and  most  powerful  of  all  of  the  Strong- 
bonian  race  in  Wexford.  In  1566  Sir 
Nicholas  D.  makes  '  bold  to  refresh  his 
acquaintance '  with  his  schoolfellow, 
Lord  Burleigh;  in  1574,  'he  was 
spoiled  of  a  great  part  of  his  inheritance 
by  the  Cavanaghs  ;'  in  1599,  Devereux, 
Earl  of  Essex,  on  his  march  from 
Waterford  to  Dublin,  passed  a  day  at 
Balmagir,  and  Knighted  Sir  J.  De- 
vereux.— p.  43,  Aim.  Kuk.  A.  Soc.  and 
Car.  Cat.,  p.  308. 

k  '  Furlongs,  malefactors  matched 
with  the  Cavanaghs.' — Survey  of  Ire- 
land, 1574-1602.  In  1539  Philip  Fur- 
long of  Carrigmenan  gent,  granted  to 
Th.  Rosseter  of  Rathmanee  gent,  his 
town  and  manor  of  Carrigmanan  ;  in 
1638,  Furlong  of  C.  sold  his  large 
estate  for  ,£2500  to  R.  Devereux,  Esq. 
Eleven  gentlemen  named  Furlong  were 
summoned  to  attend  an  expedition 
against  O'Brien  in  1345.  Their  chief 
house  was  Horetown  near  Taghmon. 
John  F.  was  Knight  of  the  Shire  in 
1613,  and  owned  the  manors  of  Cam- 
ross,  Bridgestown,  etc.;  another  branch 
lived  at  Davidstown  in  the  Glynn. 


1  The  following  letter  of  Q.  Elizabeth, 
dated  1572,  throws  some  light  on  this 
family  and  on  Wexford:  '  El.  R.  Where 
we  are  informed  that  R.  Browne  of 
Mulrancan  (a  yonge  gentilman  of  great 
valour,  wholy  given  to  our  sarvice 
against  the  disobedient  Irish  of  that 
Countie,  upon  whom  his  father  hath 
valiantly  builded  a  fortress,  and  he  after 
his  father's  death  hath  as  valiantly  kept 
and  defended  the  same,  to  the  ampli- 
fying of  our  obedc*,  being  also  near  of 
bloud  to  the  houses  of  our  r'-  tr  and 
well  beloved  Cosins  Th'  Erles  of  Kil- 
dare  and  Ormond)  is  traitorously  mur- 
dered by  Brene  McCoder  Kavanagh, 
and  his  brethren,  Hugh  McShan's  sons 
....  [These  Cavanaghs  were  kinsmen 
of  Elizabeth  through  the  Kildare  al- 
liance.— Ed.]  And  whereas  we  are  in- 
formed likewise  that  two  gentlemen  of 
our  said  co.  of  Wexford,  the  one,  J. 
Furlong  of  Horeton,  who  hath  of  late 
procured  the  pitiful  murder  of  the  sd 
Browne's  sister,  to  bring  home  her  join- 
ture to  his  house,  the  other  M.  Fitz- 
henry  of  Magsmagh,  being  under  Off" 
to  Thos.  Stukeley,  bearing  the  sd 
Browne  malice,  and  both  of  them 
cosins  of  blood  to  the  said  murderers 
of  the  Kavanaghs,  have  been  procurers 
of  the  sd  Murdr' — We  think  it  good,' 
etc. — Forwarded  by  John  P.  Prender- 
gast,  Esq.,  to  the  Kilk.  Arch.  Jour. 

m  Henry  the  6th,  '  on  account  of  the 
services  Hay  and  his  progenitors  had 


6o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Tod  of  Carne," 
Lamport  of  Ballyhinch,0 
Scurlock  of  Roseland,p 
Keting  of  Kilcowan,q 

rendered  to  the  King  and  his  predeces- 
sors, in  many  times  resisting  the 
enemy,  acccpit  eum  in  intimntn  aniiaim.' 
The  Hays  owned  the  Towers  of  Hill, 
Slade,  Tacumshene,  and  Castlehays- 
town. — Kilk.  A?imtary. 

°  Nich.  Codd  of  Came  d.  in  1564 
seised  of  the  castle  and  lands  of  Rath- 
aspig.  In  1599,  Nicholas  Codde  of 
Castleton,  son  of  Martin  Codde  and 
Margaret  da.  of  A.  Roche,  Lord  of 
Rochesland,  was  marshal  of  Wexford 
Liberty;  he  was  slain  in  1600. — (See 
'Description  of  the  Barony  of  Forth,' 
written  arc.  1680,  edit,  by  Hore  in 
Kilk.  Arch.,  Vol.  iv.,  p.  62).  'These 
Coodes  of  Castletown  expressed  singu- 
lar loyaltie  and  valour  in  Q.  Eliza,  warrs 
several  of  them  being  therein  slain.' 

0  Of  Ballyhire  near  Greenore.  The 
Wexford  jury  of  1537  'present  that  Lam- 
port of  Ballyhire  did  take  James  Kent 
prisoner,  and  took  from  him  feloniously 

p  'Scurlocke  of  Roslare. —  UsshcrM.S. 
'  He  owned  two  manors  with  a  valuable 
estate  in  Ballymore  and  Roslare,  unto 
whom  the  Copyholders  by  their  tenures 
performed  homage,  divers  customary 
duties  and  services  not  elsewhere  used, 
many  of  which  were  servile ;  none  could 
marry  in  his  Lordships  without  his  pre- 
vious License  nor  build  a  house,  nor 
suffer  it  to  be  demolished  or  to  fall  to 
decay.     If   a    Copyholder   married    a 


Chevers  of  Ballyhaly,r 
Rawceter  of  Rathmokue,5 
Wadding  of  Ballicoiley,' 

maide,  a  certaine  fine  was  payable  to 
the  Lord ;  if  a  widow,  double  as  much ; 
if  a  woman  whose  virginity  had  been 
violated,  more  ;  which  fine  or  duty  was 
termed  Lothcrwite  (i.e.,  Lother's  law). 
All  tenants  deceasing  were  liable  to 
Heriots.  Transgressors  of  such  and 
many  other  strange  customs  incurred 
forfeiture  of  their  interest  by  Copyhold.' 
— Descrip.  of  B.  Forth. 

q  yym-  Keting  was  commander  of 
Kilklogan,  arc.  1537;  Baldwin  and  R. 
Keting  were  witnesses  of  the  Charter 
of  the  Earl  of  Pembroke  to  Tintern 
Abbey.  The  eldest  house  had  the 
title  of  Barons  K.  of  Kilcowan. 

'  Cheevers,  a  Flemish  family  named 
Chevre,  long  settled  in  Wexford ;  Pat- 
rick C.  witnessed  the  charter  given  to 
Wexford  in  13 17  ;  Edward  C.  was 
created  Viscount  Mount  Leinster  by 
James  II. — Hore. 

s  The  family  came  from  Rocester  in 
Lincolshire  ;  Rossieter  of  Rathmacnee 
was  expulsed  in  1653  ;  Bargy  castle 
was  built  by  a  Rosseter,  whose  initials 
are  on  an  oak  panel  in  the  house. 
Slevoy  belonged  to  Walter  R.  in  1608; 
another  R.  lived  at  Tacumshane  and 
owned  the  manor  of  Tomhaggard. 
Colonel  R.  of  Rathmacknee  is  said  to 
have  married  a  sister  of  the  famous 
Sarsfield. — Hore. 

'  R.  Wadding  of  Ballycogly  m.  a  da. 
of  Rowseter  of  Rathmacnee,  Esq.,  and 


COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD. 


6l 


Stafford  of  Balmakeryn," 
Barry  of  Bonecarry, 
Rochfordv  of  [  ], 

French  of  Ballitorie, 
Eliot  of  Rathshillan, 
Sutton  of  Ballikerock,w 
Prendergasse  of  the  Gorchins," 

had  four  sons  and  seven  daughters ; 
his  eldest  son,  Thomas,  was  one  of  the 
Knights  of  the  Shire  in  1613,  and  was 
married  to  a  d.  of  Eustace  of  Castle- 
martin  ;  his  daughter  Elenor  was  m.  to 
Th.  Scurlock  of  Bolgan  in  the  Glynn. 

"  Ballymacarne,  the  principal  castle 
of  the  Staffords,  who  were  a  numerous 
and  distinguished  family.  There  was 
a  branch  at  Balliconnor,  where  Denis 
Stafford  of  Balliconnor  and  his  wife 
Katerina  Synnot  of  Byllygeary  built  a 
tower  in  1570,  which  still  stands. 
Their  son  Hamond  S.  died  in  1630. 

v  Of  Taghunnan  (Mountpleasant)  un- 
der the  mountain  of  Forth.  The 
Rochfords  were  barons  in  the  13th 
century  and  owned  the  barony  of 
Duffyr,  but  were  driven  northwards  by 
the  Irish. — Kilk.  Annuary,  p.  41. 

"  Ballykeroge,  a  castle  of  unusual 
dimensions  in  '  Sutton's  parish  '  near 
Ross  was  the  chief  house;  but  branches 
lived  at  Oldcourt,  Ballysop,  and  Priest- 
haggard. 

"  Gurteen — The  Prendergasts  owned 
the  territories  of  Femes  and  Kinsellagh ; 
but  were  driven  southward,  and  in 
1598  lived  in  a  tower  called  Gurteen 
near  the  mountain  of  Forth. 

y  Written  also  Bosher  or  Busher. 


Bourcher  of  Balliconnick/ 
Mayler*  of 

Redmond  of  the  Hooke, 
Laffan  of  the  Slade,aa 
Sygin  of  Syginston,bb 
Cullen  of  Cullenston, 
Osmond  of  Johnston," 

2 '  Walter  Meyler  of  Duncormack  and 
his  ancestors  have  been  in  possession 
of  Mountgarret  beside  Ross  with  the 
appurtenances,  as  their  inheritance  of 
right  until  the  Earl  of  Ossory  entered 
and  kept  it  by  force  in  15 18.'  In  1570 
Walter  M.  of  Doncormock,  gent.,  ad- 
dressed the  Government,  staring  that  he 
was  possessed  of  the  manor  of  Prysts- 
town,  'adjoining  the  salvage  nacion 
of  the  Cavanaghes,  and  the  Key  of  the 
country  upon  the  very  frontiers  of  the 
Irishry,  and  therefore  wasted  by  their 
continual  incursions,  and  they  have  oft 
times  shed  his  blood.' 

M  '  Mac  Laffan  of  the  Sladd '  is  in- 
cluded among  the  gentlemen  of  Shel- 
burne  in  the  grand  panel  of  the  co.  of 
Wexford  1608.  In  1638  Henry  Laffan 
of  Slade  Castle  died. 

bb  Siggins,  perhaps  S(-  John  ;  one  S*- 
John  had  land  at  Tomhaggard  and  at 
Monsyu  in  1472  ;  and  about  1537  W. 
Browne  '  did  take  Stephen  S'-  John  in 
ye  highway  and  did  lead  him  to  his 
castle  and  did  imprison  him  after  his 
own  use,  contrary  to  the  King's  laws 
till  he  paid  his  fine.'  There  was  also 
a  Sigon  on  the  Wexford  Jury  of  1537. 

cc  Esmond — '  Lord  Esmond  served 
as  a  Martialist  in  the  Low  Countries, 


62 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Whyte  of  Tromer, 
Eshingham  of  Dunbrody, 
Isham  of  Bryanston, 
Walshe  of  dd 
Hore  of  Sdd 

Butler  ofee  Clonkyraghe, 
Fitzjohn  of  Ballicoppock, 
Fitznealff  of  Ballyharth, 
NevelF  of  Rosegarland, 
Turnor  offf 

St.  John  of  Wexford,bb 
Whitty  of  Baltitege,gg 
Butler  of  Wexford,  Brother  to 
the  Ld-  Mountgerat, 

and  then  against  the  Kavanaghes, 
Bimes  and  O'Tooles ;  his  countenance 
terrible,  with  a  formidable  voice  when 
exasperated  ;  of  sanguine  complexion, 
compact,  solid  corpulent  body  with 
robustious  Limms,  terrible  to  his  Enemy, 
maintaining  always  a  numerous  Retinue 
of  well  accomplished  young  gentlemen, 
well  accoutred  and  compleatelie  armed 
with  excellent  serviceable  horses.  He 
was  abstemious  and  continent.' — De- 
scription of  the  B.  of  Forth,  edited  by 
H.  F.  Hore. 

dd 'Walshe  of  Polrankan ;  Hore  of 
Harpiston.' — Ussher  M.S.  In  1649 
there  were  H.  of  Pole-Hore,  H.  of 
Harperstown,  and  H.  of  Kilyash- 
lan.  In  Taghmon  Church  there  is 
a  very  ancient  monument  to  Hore  of 
Harperstown.  Wm-  Hore  of  Harpers- 
town  was  Knight  of  the  Shire  in  1559  ; 
and  was  in  1572  seised  of  the  castle 


Lewes^  of  Leweston, 

Chyver  of  Killyan, 

Hasson  of  Wexford, 

Bryan  of  theff 

And  of  the  Irishe — 

Donell  Cavanaghe,  commonlie 
called  Donell  Spaniaughe, 
or  Donell  the  Spaniard, 
being  broght  with  Stuckly 
in  Spaine,  also 

the  Sept  of  Croan  [Shean] 
McMurrow, 

The  3  Lo.  of  Kinsheloghe, 


and  lands  of  Harperstown,  held  of 
Roche  of  Drinagh,  and  of  the  castle 
and  lands  of  Taghmon,  held  of  the 
Queen. — H.  F.  Hore. 

ec  Perhaps  '  Piers  Butler,  who  has  a 
portion  of  the  Fassasse  of  Bentry,  who 
is  reported  to  be  a  rash  young  man.' — 
Survey  of  Ireland. 

"  '  Fitznicol ;  Nevil  baron  of  Rose- 
garland  ;  Turner  of  Ballyasshin  ;  Lowes 
of  Lowston  ;  Brian  of  the  Starr  ;  Graye.' 
—  Ussher  M.S.  (e.  4.  33)  T.C.D.  There 
was  also  a  '  Pippard  of  Glascarrig,'  ac- 
cording to  the  Car.  Cat.  j  and  there 
was  an  influential  family,  named  Gerot, 
as  appears  from  a  paper  penes  me. 

es  R.  Whitty  of  Bally teige  b.  1546, 
d.  1623,  was  J.P.  for  the  co.  of  Wex- 
ford ;  held  three  manors,  three  caru- 
cates  and  523  acres;  married  ad.  of 
Sir  N.  Devereux  of  Ballymagir,   'the 


COUNTIE  OF  WEXFORD.  63 

McVadock,hh  Edmond  Duff. 

McDanore, 

The  whole  Countie  of  Catherlaghe,  and  the  one  halfe  of  the 
Countie  of  Wexford  was  in  tymes  past  inhabitted  by  the  Cavan- 
aghes,  who  being  by  Warr  driven  out  have  from  time  to  time 
greatlie  disturbed  the  Inhabitants  of  the  foresaid  Counties  ; 
there  remayneth  of  them  but  few,  and  these  of  four  Septs  or 
Families,  of  which  Griffyne  McMorroghe  and  his  Brethren  were 
chief  and  dwelt  nere  Fearnes  ;  the  Elder  Brother  being  Exe- 
cuted, the  younger  doth  altogether  depend  upon  Sr  Henrie 
Wallop. 

The  Second  Familie  is  Donell  Spaniaughe  and  his  Kinsmen, 
who  also  pretended  to  be  much  at  the  devotion  of  Sr  Henrie 
Wallop,  who  procured  to  the  said  Donell  a  yearlie  Pension 
from  the  quene,  but  of  late  being  Sturred  up  by  the  Earle  of 
Tyrone,  he  took  Armes  against  the  quene  and  challingeth  the 
Hous  of  Enishcortie  possessed  and  sumptuouslie  Builded  by  Sr 
Henrie  Wallop,  without  which  he  purposeth  not  to  live  in 
quiet."     The  3rd  was  the  Sept  of  Bryan  McCare  of  or 

White  Knight ; '  his  son  married  a  d.  skirt  of  the  Duffry,  the  chief  fastness  of 

of   Stafford    of  Ballyconnor,   and    his  D.  Spaniaghe,  who  now  pretends  [to 

grandson  married  a  d.  of  Oliver  Eus-  be    chief?]    of    the    Cavanaghs    and 

tace  of  Ballynunry.      There  is  a  fine  McMurragh,  which  in  the  Irish  account 

monument  to  the  Whittys  in  the  ruined  is  no  less  than  to  be  King  of  Leynister. 

Church  of  Kilmore. — SezKilk.  A.  Jour.  His  Lordship  also  viewed  the  ground 

year  1872,  p.  62.  between  Eniscorthy  and  this  fastness, 

bh  McVadock  and    McDamore  were  where  the  garrison  had  not  long  before 

descended  from  Murchadh  a  brother  of  skirmished  with  D.  Spaniaghe.     Soon 

Dermot    IVFMurrough.        McVadock's  after,  D.    Spaniagh,   Phelim    McFeagh 

sept  dwelt  round  Gorey.     Hi   Kinsel-  and    McRowry  fought   against    Essex, 

lagh,  Ui  Cennselach,  was  in  the  north-  In  Sept.  1599  he  was  in  action  with 

east  of  the  co.  of  Wexford.  300  or  400  of  his  followers  in  the  co. 

"In  June  1599  Essex  'viewed  the  of  Wexford  and  greatly  annoying  these 


64 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


S'-  mollins  and  these  depended  upon  Sr  Antony  Colclough  in 
his  Life  tyme,  and  now  I  suppose  they  depend  upon  his  Sone, 
Sir  Thomas  Colcloughe  Sone-in-Law  to  the  late  Lord  Chan- 
cellor. The  4th  are  of  the  Countie  of  Catherlagh  in  the  Baronie 
of  Idrone,whose  chief  dependance  was  upon  the  Earle  of  Ormond. 


The  head  of  this  last  Sept  was  Mourtoghe  oge 


latelie 


by  one  of  the  Omailies.  The  rest  of  them  together  with  the 
Remainder  of  the  third  Familie,  have  joined  themselves  toge- 
ther with  the  foresaid  Donell  Spaniaughe  who  dailie  vexeth  the 
Counties  of  Wexford,  Catherlaghe,  Kildare  and  Dublin  ;  he  is 
not  able  to  make  above  200  Footmen,  who,  being  prosecuted 
from  Countie  to  Countie,  hath  continuall  relief  from  Phelim 
McFeughe  the  Rebell  of  the  Countie  in  Dublin,  whose  Brother- 
in-law  he  is»kk 


parts.  Much  of  the  lands  of  Donall 
Spaniaghe  were  possessed  by  Sir  R. 
Masterson,  Sir  H.  Wallop,  Lord  Mount- 
garrett,  and  Sir  N.  Walshe  ;  his  ances- 
tor>  Art  Boy  Kevanaghe  possessed 
Enischortye,  etc' — Car.  Cal. 

A  member  of  this  clan,  Morgan 
Kavanagh,  was  Governor  of  Prague 
in  1766,  and  was  the  largest  man  in 
Europe.  Relatives  of  his  were  living  in 
Austria  in  the  year  1844,  and  were 
declared  by  Professor  Niemann  of 
Vienna  to  be  the  tallest  men  in  all 
Germany.  They  were  descendants  of 
Bryan  na-Siroice  Kavanagh,  who  was 
the  largest  man  in  the  army  of  James 
the  Second. — See  O' Donovan  on  the 
Physical  Characteristics  of  tlie  Irish,  in 
Ulster  J.  of  Arclt* 


**  A  Souvenir  of  Wexford  in  1598 
has  been  recently  discovered  : — '  Near 
the  burial  ground  of  Bannow  have  been 
found  squared  granite  stones,  forming 
the  entrance  to  a  house,  and  on  one 
of  the  stones,  a  portion  of  which  had 
been  broken  off,  was  the  fragmentary 
inscription  ; — 

.  >  .  .  mes  .  colli  .  fz 
.  .  ence  .  builded  .  this 
house  .  in  .  the  .  yeere  .  of 
owre  .  lord  .  1598  .  and 
marion  .  sinot  .  his  .  wife. 
This  may  be  read  :    "  [Ja]mes  Collin 
(Cullen)  fitz  [Lawr]  ence  builded  this 
house  in  the  yeere  of  our  Lord  1598, 
and  Marion  Sinot,  his  wife." ' — Kilk. 
J.  of  Arch.,  October  1864. 


COUNTIE  OF  KILKENNY.  65 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  KILKENNY. 

This  Countie  hath  the  most  shew  of  civilitiea  of  any  other  of 
the  border  Counties,  in  respect  of  the  fayre  Seats  of  Howses,  the 
number  of  Castles  and  Inglysh  manner  of  Inclosure  of  their 
Grounds.  It  is  bounded  with  the  River  Barow  to  the  East,  with 
the  River  Suer  to  the  South,  with  Ossorie  to  the  North  with 
Tipperairie  to  the  West.  These  Counties  being  Ancientlie 
called  Osseria  seemeth  to  contayne  the  whole  county  of  Kil- 
kenny or  rather  Ossery,  and  the  other  part  called  upp.  Osserie, 
and  so  to  be  all  one  Countie.  But  albeit  many  directions  have 
been  sent  from  the  Queen  and  her  progenitors  for  the  deciding 
of  this  controversie,  Yet  McGillaPatrick,  the  ancient  possessor 
of  Upper  Osserie  and  now  baronb  of  it  wou'd  never  consent  to 
be  of  that  Countie  for  the  native  malice  between  them,  the  one 
having  been  utter  Enimie  to  the  other ;  but  pleadeth  a  Prero- 
gative by  custome  to  be  out  of  all  Shyreground  and  to  be 
Sheriffe  himselfe  for  the  Execution  of  the  civill  cawses,  and 
criminall  cawses,  he  rather  sorteth  himself  to  be  of  the  new 


a  A  Kilkenny  jury  in  1537  declared  lady,  his  wyff,  the  Lord  Jamys  Butler, 

that — '  The   gentylmen    with    all    the  and  other  the  said  Erie's  children  and 

comoners  of  the  said  counte,  the  Sover-  Kyne  of  his  name;  wherefor  to  provide 

eine  with  all  the  heddes  and  comoners  that  these  persons  may  be  reduced,  the 

of  the  towne  of  Kilkenny,   ben  very  countie  wyl  be  immediately  prosperous 

desirous  to  be  obedient  to  the  Kinges  and  of  gret   strength  to  defend  ther- 

lawe,  and  to  lyve  in  good  cevylitie ;  selves    against    their    enemyes.' — An- 

and  albehit  the  Kinges  laws  in  the  said  nuary,  p.  136. 

counte  be   not   only  clerly  void   and  b  Florence,   the  3rd  Lord,  lived  in 

frustrate,  but   also  all   the   exactions,  the  time  of  Elizabeth,  m.  a  daughter  of 

suppressions  and  other  enormities  be-  O'More  of  Leix ;  his  son,  Thady  the 

fore  presented,  with  many  mo,  be  men-  4th  lord,  m.  a  daughter  of  Sir  Edmund 

teyned  only  by  the  Erie  of  Ossory,  my  Butler  of  Tullow,  and  d.  1627. 

I 


66 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1598. 


Countie,  and  so  in  all  criminall  cawses  to  be  tried  by  the  late 
planted  Inglyshe,  then  by  their  Ancient  Enemies  the  Countie  of 
Kilkenny. 

'  Kilkenny0 
Thomaston 
Callan 
Id 

Gaurand 
Balleragat 
Burnchurche 
and  many  other  of  meane  reckoning. 


The  chief  Tonnes  of  this 
Countie  are  these: 


c  '  The  best  uplandish  towne  in  Ire- 
land ....  famous  for  Peter  White's 
school  out  of  which  have  sprouted  such 
proper  Impes  so  as  the  whole  weale 
publik  of  Ireland  is  thereby  furthered.' 
— Stanihurst.  '  Kilkenny  the  best  dry 
towne  in  Ireland.' — Campion. 

'  The  most  pleasant  and  delightful 
town  of  ye  Kingdom ;  the  buildings 
are  fair  and  people  fashionable ;  its 
cituation  is  in  the  best  Air  of  Ireland 
upon  the  river  Nore  of  admirable  cleer 
water  upon  a  gravel — it  is  said  that  it 
hath — 
"  Water  without  mud,  air  without  fog, 

Fire  without  smoke  and  land  without 
bog." ' 
—Dynelfs  Tour,  temp.  Charles  II 

In  1644  it  seemed  to  Le  Gouz,  a 
French  traveller,  as  large  as  Orleans, 
which  had  31,000  inhabitants. 

The  ten  leading  families  or  '  tribes 
of  Kilkenny,'  are  thus  given,  in  Galway 
fashion,    by   Mr.    Prim : 


'Archdekin,  Archer,  Cowley,  Langton,  Ley, 
Knaresborough,  Lawless,  Ragget,  Rothe  and  Shee.' 

The  Shees,  the  only  one  of  un- 
doubted Milesian  blood,  was  the  most 
important,  and  next  to  them  ranked 
Rothe  and  Archer. — J.  G.  A.  Prim,  Esq. 

The  Corporation  of  K.  in  1537  : — 
Shee,  Rothe,  Lanton,  Rothe,  Hakket, 
Walshe,  Rothe,  Shee,  Ragge,  Archer, 
Raaour,  Lawless,  Savage. 

'  Commyners  of  the  town  of  Kil- 
kenny in  1537  : — Lye,  Busser,  Dormon- 
dus,  Marshall,  Clery.  Brasell,  Purcell, 
Thyvyn,  Langton,  Rothy,  Machill, 
Gybbes,  Ragge,  Garrard,  Archer, 
Cavin.' 

d  I  is  perhaps  Inistioge ;  Gauran  is 
Gowran.  'In  1608  Gowran  got  a  char- 
ter, and  N.  Hackett  was  made  Port- 
reeve, and  Everarde,  Archer,  J.  Nashe, 
R.  Nashe,  J.  Swayne,  E.  Staunton, 
Kealy,  Raghtor,  R.  Swayne,  M.  Staun- 
ton, E.  Walshe,  and  T.  Staunton  were 
Burgesses  and  of  the  Common  Council 


COUNTIE  OF  KILKENNY. 


67 


Castles . 


Kilkenny 
Gaurand 
Kell 

Ballingtoughe 
Creey  Toune 
Whyte's  Hall 

Men  of  Accompt? 


The  Earle  of  Ormond/ 

his  name  JanVMButler, 

his  chief  Hous  Carrick  ; 

The  L.  Viscount  Mountgarots 

of  the  Borough.' — Kilk.  J.  of  Arch., 
July  187 1,  p.  540.  In  1608  David 
Archer  was  constable  to  the  Earl  of 
Ormond  of  the  Castle  of  Gowran. 

c  The  gentlemen  of  the  jury  of  the 
Shire  of  Kilkenny  in  1537  were: — 
Grace,  Sweetman,  Comerforth,  Dobbin, 
Smith,  Watonn,  Cowik,  Datowne, 
Howel,  Forstall,  Forstall,  Purcell, 
Shortall,  Shortall,  Forstall,  Croke  and 
Blomfeld. 

Jury  of  the  Commyners  of  the  Co. 
of  Kilk.  in  1537  : — Troddye,  Herford, 
Moteing,  Fanneing,  Mounsell,  How- 
ling, all  of  Callan  ;  Forstall,  Power, 
Walshe,  Arland,  and  Karron,  all  of 
Inystioke ;  Power,  Tywe,  FitzTohn, 
Lacye,  all  of  Knocktopher  ;  Lorknan, 
Whyte  of  Knocktopher. — See  Annuary 
of  Kilk.  J.  of  A. 

f  Thomas  10th  Earl,  called  The 
Black  Earl ;  his  mother  was  daughter 
and  heir  of  the  nth  Earl  of  Desmond; 
♦lis  father's  mother  was  a  d.  of  the  Sth 


his  name  Richd  Butler, 
The  L.  Bishop  of  Ossorie_ 
his  Seat  at  Kilkenny, 


C-< 


Earl  of  Kildare  ;  he  enjoyed  the  title 
since  the  year  1546;  in  1559  he  was 
constituted  lord  treasurer  of  Ireland, 
and  in  the  Carew  Calendar  he  is  styled 
'  Lord  General,  General  of  the  Army, 
and  Lord  Lieutenant  General.'  He 
was  a  great  favourite  of  Elizabeth  ;  ac- 
cording to  Burke's  Peerage  '  he  was  the 
first  of  his  family  to  conform  to  the 
Church  of  England;'  however,  he  be- 
came a  Catholic  a  few  years  before  his 
death,  and  was  constantly  visited  by 
Fathers  Walle  and  O'Keamey,  S.J. 
He  had  six  brothers. 

e  Edmund  Butler  2nd  Viscount 
Mountgarret,  1st  cousin  of  the  Earl  of 
Ormonde ;  he  married  a  d.  of  Fitz- 
Patrick  1st  Lord  of  Upper  Ossory  ;  he 
died  in  1602,  and  was  succeeded  by 
his  son  Richard,  who  had  married  the 
eldest  d.  of  the  Earl  of  Tyrone.  His 
hou=e  is  called  Beallagarett  and  Ballin- 
aggett  in  the  Car.  Cal.  The  1 2th  Vis- 
count was  made  Earl  of  Kilkenny. 


68 


Garrot,h     Baronet 

church, 
Purcell'  of  Ballynfoyle, 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598 

of     Burn 


Edwd  Butler  of  Butlerswood, 
Deanek  of  Thomastowne, 
David  Baron1  of  Brownsfoord, 


h  Rowland  FitzGerald  alias  Baron 
de  Burnchurch.  In  the  churchyard  of 
Bumchurch  there  is  a  tomb  of '  Fitz- 
Gerald alias  Baron,  dominus  de  Burn- 
church,  who  d.  in  1545.  The  castle  of 
B.  is  in  a  good  state  of  preservation. 
The  representative  of  this  family  is  Sir 
H.  Winston  Barron.' — Kilk.  Annuary 
0/1858.  The  Baron  of  Burnchurche 
is  the  title  given  by  the  Kilkenny  juries 
of  1537. — Annuary. 

'  To  P.  of  Ballyfoyle  was  erected 
Purcell's Cross  in  St,  Patrick's  Cemetery: 
it  bears  the  inscription,  '  Orate  pro 
anima  Nobilimi  D.D.  Edmundi  Pur- 
celli,  qui  obiit  16  Aug.  1625.'  The 
Baron  of  Loughmoe  in  Tipperary  was 
the  head  of  the  Purcells  from  whom  N. 
Purcell  O'Gorman  is  descended  in  the 
female  line ;  but  there  were  five  re- 
spectable branches  in  Kilkenny,  viz.  : — 
of  Ballyfoile,  of  Foulksrath,  of  Lismain, 
of  Ballymartin  and  of  Clone.— See  The 
Wayside  Crosses,  by  Mr.  Prim,  in  Vol.  I. 
of  Kilk,  J.  of  Arch. 

The  Purcells  were  hereditary  captains 
of  Ormonde's  Kerne.  The  chief  stock 
lived  at  Foulksrath,  the  offsets  at  Bally- 
foyl,  Lismain,  Clone  and  Ballymartin. 
Edmund  Purcell  '  captain  of  Kerne  ' 
died  iir  1549,  and  is  buried  in  S1- 
Canice,  where  his  tombstone  bears  the 
inscription,  '  Capitanus  turbariorum 
Comitis  Ormoniae.' — Mr.  Prim  in  Kilk. 
[.  of  Archaology. 


There  was  a  Patrick  Porcell  gent,  of 
Lowyston  in  the  year  1537  ;  and  Piers 
P.  of  Ballyen  ;  also  '  the  Lorde  Pur- 
cell.'— See  Annuary,  pp.  116,  117,  121, 
123,  132. 

The  ruin  of  Ballyfoile  Castle  stands 
in  the  glen  of  that  name  at  the  foot  of 
the  Johnswell  mountains. 

k  Also  '  Mr.  Den  of  Grenan.' — Car. 
Col. 

1  David  FitzGerald,  alias  Barron. 
This  family,  which  had  the  title  of  Baron 
after  it  had  ceased  to  be  summoned  to 
Parliament  as  such,  was  of  the  Geral- 
dine  stock.  The  title  came  at  last  to 
be  a  surname.  A  way-side  Cross  in 
the  Square  of  Inistioge  has  the  inscrip- 
tion, '  Orate  pro  animabus  Domini 
David  Geraldini,  dicti  Baron  de 
Brownsfoord,  obiit  14,  Apr.  1621/  et 
Joannae  Mor  res' 

The  castle  of  Brownsford  is  situate 
over  the  Nore.  In  1537  the  Kilkenny 
'  Jurye  present  that  the  Baron  of 
Brownesforde,  and  his  officers  doth 
use  Blak  men,  that  is  to  saye,  the 
Baron  will  show  the  country  that  he 
hath  VHP*  Gallawglasseis,  and  require 
wages  of  them  therefor;  where  of 
truthe  he  hath  not  above  the  number  of 
100  Gallowglassheis,  and  doth  take  and 
levye  of  the  country  wages  for  VIII" 
personnes,  and  so  keepeth  the  residue 
of  the  money  to  himself,  which 
amounteth  to  the  some  of  60  persons 


COUNTIE  OF  KILKENNY. 


69 


Fostor"1  of  Kilseraghe, 
Sir  Richard  SheeJ1  Knight, 
Sir  James  Butler"  Knight, 


Sir  Pierce  Butlerp  Knight, 
and  divers   more   Families   of 


wages.' — See  Annuary,  pp.  117,  121, 
and  Mr.  Prim's  Wayside  Crosses  in 
Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 

m  Gerald  Forster.  In  1537  R.  For- 
stell  of  Kilferrouthe  gent.  From  a 
pedigree  it  appears  the  name  was  origi- 
nally Forrester,  but  the  name  was 
afterwards  written  Fforstall.  The  head 
of  the  family  held  the  manors  of  Kil- 
feragh  and  Ballyfrunck  by  Knight's  ser- 
vice from  the  Crown  in  capite.  Mon- 
sieur Forestall  of  Paris  is  believed  to 
be  the  head  of  the  Kilkenny  Forstalls 
of  Rochestown. 

n  Of  Upper  Court  and  Cloran ;  he 
was  descended  from  O'Seagha,  chief  of 
Iveragh  in  Kerry.  He  was  son  of 
Robert  Shee  and  Margaret  Rothe ;  he 
was  a  member  of  Gray's  Inn,  seneschal 
of  Irishtown  in  1568,  in  1576  deputy 
to  the  E.  of  Ormonde  (lord  high  trea- 
surer of  Ireland),  he  was  knighted  in 
1589  ;  he  died  at  his  castle  of  Bonnetts- 
town  in  1603,  and  in  his  will  left  an 
injunction  on  his  son,  Lucas,  to  build 
an  Alms'  House,  and  left  his  curse  on 
any  of  his  descendants  who  should  ever 
attempt  to  alienate  the  property  pro- 
vided for  its  maintenance,  which  con- 
sisted chiefly  of  impropriate  tithes.  A 
cross  was  erected  to  Sir  Richard  by  his 
wife  Dame  Margaret  Fagan.  His  son 
Lucas  married  a  sister  of  Lord  Mount- 
garret,  and  at  Freshford  there  is  or  was 
a  Wayside  Cross  erected  in  memory  of 


Lucas  and  his  wife,  and  the  site  is 
called  in  Irish  Bun  na  Croise. 

Colonel  CounjJZVShee,  of  the  French 
service,  is  the  representative  of  Sir 
Richard,  whose  old  vellum  Cartulary 
he  possesses.  From  Sir  Richard's  se- 
cond son,  Marcus  of  Sheestown,  is  de- 
scended J.  Power  O'Shee,  Esq.,  of 
Sheestown  and  Gardenmorres.  Sir 
Richard's  brother,  Elias  Shee  of  Cran- 
more  was,  says  Hollingshed,  '  a  scholar 
of  Oxford,  of  passing  wit,  a  pleasant 
conceited  companion,  full  of  mirth 
without  gall ;'  from  him  was  descended 
Sir  G.  Shee  of  Dunmore,  co.  of  Galway. 

0  Perhaps  '  Sir  James  Oge  Butler  of 
Slewardaghe.' 

p  '  Mr-  P£ers_Butler_of  Old  Abbey.' 
— Car.  Cal. 

Piers  Fitz  Thomas  Butler  of  Duiske 
Abbey  and  Lowgrange,  illegitimate  son 
of  the  Earl  of  Ormonde,  died  in  1601, 
leaving  (by  his  wife,  a  da.  of  Lord 
Slane)  two  sons,  Edward,  afterwards 
Viscount  Galmoy,  and  Sir  Richard 
Butler  of  Knocktopher.  Piers  was  a 
zealous  Catholic,  and  did  his  best  to 
save  Archbishop  O'Hurly ;  he  died  in 
1 601.  In  1697  the  third  Viscount 
Galmoy  was  attainted,  but  James  the 
Second  created  him  Earl  of  Newcastle — 
a  poor  recompense  for  the  broad  acres 
which  he  had  lost. — See  an  account  of 
Galmoy  and  his  regiment  in  O'Cal- 
laghan's  Irish  Brigades. 


,4* &-<L4=^^ 


7° 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I59S. 


Butlersq  Graces/  Shees,  Cant- 
wells,5  Comberfords/  Deanes, 
Archdeacons,"     Walshes/ 


Roothes*  Archers,"  Dormers, 
Stronges,  which  are  thought 


q  '  Richard  B.  now  sheriff,  of  Pallis- 
toun.' — Car.  Cal.  From  the  B.  of 
Paulstown  came  Colonel  B.  the  slayer 
of  Wallenstein,  and  Sir  W.  Butler  who 
defended  Kilkenny  against  Cromwell. 

'  There  is  a  '  Grace's  Cross '  near 
Bonnetstown,  erected  by  Edward  G. 
and  his  wife  Catherine  Archer  ;  he  was 
of  the  family  of  the  Barons  of  Courts- 
town  ;  he  d.  in  16 19.  Sir  J.  Grace, 
Baron  of  Courtstown,  died  after  1568; 
his  tomb  is  in  St.  Canice's. 

5  '  Of  Cantwellstown.'  —  Car.  Cal. 
Cantwell's  Court  is  four  miles  north-east 
of  Kilkenny. 

'  '  Garret  Comerford  of  Inchiolegan.' 
—  Car.  Cal.  The  head  of  the  Comer- 
fords  was  Baron  of  Danganmore ; 
junior  members  were  settled  at  Bally- 
mack,  Ballybur,  Callan  and  Inchebo- 
loghan  Castle;  circa  1572  'Thomas  C. 
late  of  Ballymacka,  having  been  in  his 
lifetime  one  of  the  chiefest  conspirators 
and  actual  dooers  in  this  last  rebellion, 
was  attainted.'  At  Danganmore  there 
is  a  Wayside  Cross  with  a  Latin  in- 
scription, asking  prayers  for  the  souls 
of  Richard  C.  and  his  wife,  Domina 
Joanna  SL  Leger. 

u  'Archdeacon  of  Bawnmore.' — Car. 
Cal.  Also  A.  of  Dangan ;  they  were 
descended  from  Odo  le  Ercedekne, 
and  hence,  when  the  family  waxed 
Irish  it  took  the  name  of  Mac  Odo, 
shortened  to  Cody.     Of  this  family  was 


Father  Arsdekin,  S.J.,  the  celebrated 
Author  of  the  Theologia  Tripartita. 

v  'Walsh  of  Castle  Hely  and  Mr. 
Justice  Walshe  of  Glomemore.' — Car. 
Cal.  W.  of  Castlehowell  was  the  head 
of  the  Kilkenny  Walshes  or  the  Bren- 
nachs  of  the  Walsh  Mountains.  By 
the  Kilkenny  Jury  of  1537  they  are 
called  Brennach,  and  Walter  B.  and 
his  sons  are  presented  as  exacting 
coyne  and  lively.  Walter  W.  the  head 
of  the  family  died  in  161 9.  'The 
Walshes  are  a  great  sect  at  the  Earl 
of  Ormond's  commandment,'  says  a 
state  paper  of  this  time,  to  which  I 
cannot  now  give  a  reference. 

■  The  most  distinguished  man  of 
this  family  in  1598  was  Dr.  D.  Rothe 
afterwards  Bishop  of  Ossory. 

1  In  1597  Thomas  Archer  was  sheriff 
of  Kilkenny  City;  in  1601,  Patrick  A. 
and  in  1603  Martin  A.  were  sheriffs. 
In  1602  John  Archer  FitzLaurence, 
burgess  of  the  city  of  Kilkenny,  in  his 
will  mentions  his  sons  William  and 
Matthew,  and  his  daughters,  to  whom 
he  leaves  his  land  in  fee.  In  1605, 
Megge  Archer  FitzEdward  mentions 
her  son  Jenkan  Roth  and  desires  her 
'  body  to  be  buried  with  her  husband 
Jenkan  Rothe  in  the  Choire  of  our 
Ladye  Chapell  Kilkenny.'  In  1599 
'the  Sovraigne  Burgesses  and  Commons 
demised  to  Walter  Archer  FitzArcher 
Esquire,  S'-  James'  Castle,  provided  he 


COUNTIE  OF  KILKENNY. 


Thought  to  be  Stranges/  their  Amies  agreeing  with  the  Stranges 
of  Ingl. ;  St.  Legers,z  Blanchviles,aa  Staffordes,  Sweatman,bb  Ger- 
aldin,  Tobyn,"  Dobyn,  Forestall,  Crooke,  Hullen,  Arnold 
White  Dalton  Smethes  Dryling  Shortall,dd  Wales,  Waton  Row 


cover  the  same  with  oken  timber  and 
maintain  it  stiff,  strong,  staunch  and 
tenentable  ;  but  the  Soveraigne,  etc., 
should  have  the  use  of  it  in  time  of 
war  or  danger.' 

y  Peter  Strong  of  Dunkit  and  Ayl- 
wardstown,  where  the  present  head  of 
the  family,  Peter  Strange,  Esq.,  resides. 

*  The  Jury  of  1537  present  that  Lord 
Sleggar  charged  his  tenauntes  with 
coyne  and  livery.  In  1549  he  is  called 
Baron  Lyster.  S4,  Leger  (or  Slyggar) 
lived  at  Tullaghanbroge,  also  a  branch 
resided  at  Ballyfennon ;  they  were 
called  Barons  or  '  Banrets '  of  Slew- 
margie,  and  by  Stanihurst  are  described 
as  '  mere  Irish.'  Hanmer  states  that 
Slieve  Margie  was  granted  to  Sf-  Leger 
with  the  title  of  Baron,  and  that  of  late 
years  (circa  1598)  a  gentleman  of  the 
name  dwelling  at  Danganstown  near 
Carlow  laid  claim  to  the  same,  as  de- 
scendant of  S1-  Leger. 

33  Gerald  Blancheville  of  Blanch- 
villestown  was  Knight  of  the  Shire  in 
1584;  his  son,  Sir  Edmond  B.  was 
living  in  16 16,  and  was  maternally  de- 
scended from  the  Earls  of  Ormond. 
The  Blanchfield  living  in  1537  is  called 
by  the  Kilkenny  Jury  '  lorde  Blanche- 
feld.'  Sir  John  Blanchfield  Knt.  was 
summoned  to  the  war  in  Scotland  in 
the  year  1335. 


bb'Sweetman  of  Castlelyf.' — Car. 
Cal. 

Sir  R.  Sweetman  was  summoned  as 
a  Baron  to  Parliament  in  1374  ;  Ed- 
ward S.  of  Hoodgrove  died  in  1616 
seised  of  a  castle  in  Gowran,  a  castle 
in  Thomastown,  etc.  The  chief  seats 
of  the  S.  were  Castlereife,  and  Newtown 
D'Erley. 

William  S.  of  Castellyf  in  the  co.  of 
Kilkenny,  Gent,  tried  to  persuade  Sir 
Edmund  Butler  to  submit  to  the  Go- 
vernment in  1569.  By  the  jury  of 
1537  S.  is  called  'the  lord  Sweetman.' 

cc  Originally  Sc'  Aubin.  They  were 
titular  Barons  of  Comsey  in  the  co.  of 
Tipperary,  a  branch  seems  to  have  set- 
tled at  Ballaghtobin  in  the  co.  of  Kil- 
kenny.— Annuary,  p.  127. 

dd  '  Shortall  of  Ballylorcan,  S.  of 
Clagh.' — Car.  Cal.  J.  Shortalls,  'Lord 
of  Ballylorcan,'  whose  tomb  was  erected 
in  1507,  is  buried  with  his  wife  Catha- 
rine White  in  the  Cathedral  of  S' 
Canice.  Sir  Oliver  S.  of  Ballylorcan, 
and  Castle  Idough,  etc.,  married  the 
widow  of  N.  Shortal  of  Upper  Claragh  ; 
he  died  in  1630.  The  jury  of  1537 
presented  that  '  the  Lorde  Shertell 
(written  also  here  Sortall)  useth  the 
same  exaccyons  as  the  Earl  of  Ossory.' 
The  war-cry  of  the  Shortalls  was  Pucan- 
sac-abo  ! 


72 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Frayneee  Dowley  Knaresburghe 

Conway,  Baggad,  Lancton*1  Troddy,  Lawles 

Davels  Ledwyshe  Brenan,gs  Swayne,  Cormickehh 

Of  these  the  L.  Mountgarrat  accompanied  with  many  Butlers, 


ee  Frenge,  French,  Fulke  de  la 
Freigne  was  first  of  the  gentlemen  of 
the  shire  summoned  to  the  war  of 
Scotland  in  1302.  The  head  of  the 
F.  lived  at  Ballyreddy  where  Lord 
Freny  died  in  161 1.  Lord  de  Freyne 
is  of  this  family,  being  descended  from 
Oliver  de  Freyne  who  was  seneschal  of 
Kilkenny  in  1336.  We  find  a  cross 
at  Ballyneale  near  New  Ross,  and  a 
tomb  to  Robert  Frayne,  '  viro  vere  pio, 
munifico  et  hospita/i,'  erected  by  his 
wife  Eleanor  Geraldine,  d.  of  the  Baron 
of  Brownsford ;  he  died  in  1643.  The 
de  F.  was  usually  seneschal  or  chief 
officer  to  Ormond. — See  Mr.  Prim's 
Wayside  Crosses. 

"  In  1598  the  Rev.  J.  Langton  was 
one  of  the  vicars  choral  of  St.  Canice. 
In  the  same  year  Edward  L.  was  sove- 
reign of  Kilkenny.  Nich.  L.,  Alderman, 
and  P.  Archer  Esq.  were  members  for 
Kilkenny  in  1613.  Mrs.  Peter  Grehan, 
of  Rutland  Square,  Dublin,  is  of  this 
family  ;  her  brother,  F.  Langton,  Esq., 
of  London,  is  its  representative, 
and  also  heir  and  representative 
of  the  Comerfords,  Palatine  Barons  of 
Danganmore.  The  Rev.  E.  Madden 
R  C.C.  is  also  a  representative  of  the 
Langtons  and  Comerfords,  and  owns 
the  '  great  stone  house  '  of  Langton  in 
Kilkenny.  Alderman  Langton,  M.P., 
who  was  born  in  1562  and  d.   1632, 


had  twelve  sons  and  thirteen  daughters. 
— See  Memoirs  of  the  La?igtons  by  Mr. 
Prim  in  the  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 

EB  The  following  were  the  septs  of 
O'Brenans  arc  1603:  'The  sept  of 
Gilpatrick  O'Brenan  of  Rathcally  which 
are  called  Clanmoriertagh  hath  seven 
towns  or  hamlets  ;  the  sept  of  Edmund 
O'B.  of  Kildergan,  alias  Hokerety,  and 
Edmund  O'B.  of  Smithstown,  which 
sept  are  called  Clan  McConill,  they 
own  four  towns  and  hamlets  ;  the  sept 
of  Ffarr  M'Donoghoe  of  Croghfenaly, 
which  are  called  Clanvickelowe,  they 
have  three  towns  and  hamlets  ;  the 
sept  of  Moriertagh  McDonoghoue 
Killy,  which  are  called  Clanowly,  they 
own  KyledonoghoueKilly,  and  three 
other  places.' — Rev.  James  Graves  in 
1st  Vol.  of  Kilkenny  J.  of  Arch. 

Ul  Also  'Lovellof  Ballymaka.' — Car. 
Cat.  There  were  also  Barnabe  Bolgyr 
at  Bishopscourt,  the  Cowleys  ancestors 
of  Wellington,  the  Grants  of  Curluddy 
and  Ballynabooly,  Le  Poer  of  Powers 
Wood ;  the  Rochfords,  whose  feudal 
residence  was  the  Black  Castle  of  Kil- 
dare.  There  was  also  a  family  of  Gall 
or  Gall-Burke  of  Gallstown,  from  which 
Dr.  O'Donovan,  the  Irish  scholar,  was 
sprung.  Walter  Gall  de  Burgo  of 
Gallstown  was  M.P.  for  Kilkenny 
county  in  1560.  Of  his  sons,  Walter 
d.  in  1642  ;  William  (Count  Gall  von 


THE  QUENES  COUNTIE. 


/  6 


Graces,  and  all  the  younger  Brethren  of  Gent  of  this  Countie  are 
7iow  in  Rebellion  he  is  able  to  make  about  150  Horsemen  and  500 
Footemen,  they  Stop  the  Passage  from  Dtiblin  to  Motmster  which 
lieth  through  this  Countie  and  do  much  harm  to  all  the  Counties 
adjacent  [The  lines  in  italics  are  Cancelled  in  the"  Original]. 


THE  QUENES  COUNTIE  alias  LEASE.* 

This  Countie  contayneth  all  the  Lands  in  effect  between  the 
Water  of  Barrow  and  Ormond,  including  all  that  did  belong  to 
Omore  Odwine  [ODunn]  upper   Ossyrie  and   Sleumaghe  [als 


Bourckh  of  the  German  Empire)  d. 
1655;  James  was  slain  at  Torgau ; 
David  was  slain  at  Leipsig  in  1631  ; 
Patrick  was  in  the  Spanish  service,  and 
Thomas  was  living  in  1636,  in  the 
Austrian  army,  and  had  a  son  William 
Walter  Gall  de  Burgo,  Count  Gall  von 
Bourckh  of  Gerstorf  and  Holstein. — 
See  Dr.  0 'Donovan '.r  Memoir  of  the 
Gall-Burkes,  in  the  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 

"  In  April  1599,  Mountgarret  with 
his  brother's  sons,  Richard,  James  and 
Edward,  and  followers,  are  in  rebellion 
with  the  O'Carrolls  :  their  forces  150; 
whereof  20  are  horse,  besides  continual 
assistance  from  Tyrone,  to  whose 
daughter  Mountgarret  married  his  son. 
— Car.  Cal.,  p.  298. 

The  English  had  in  Kilkenny  230 
horse  under  Ormond,  Sir  J.  Lambert, 
Sir  Walter  Butler,  Sir  Chr.  Su  Law- 
rence,   and    Captains     Fleming    and 


Taffe;  also  800  foot  under  Ormond, 
Sir  Carew  Reynel,  Sir  H.  Follyot, 
Croft,  Sheffield  and  Pinner. — Moryson, 

P-  43- 

N.B. — Most  of  these  notes  on  Kil- 
kenny have  been  put  together  from  the 
Arinuary  of  the  Kilk.  Arch.  Soc,  an. 
186S,  and  from  various  papers  by  the 
Rev.  J.  Graves  and  J.  Prim,  Esq.,  in 
the  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 
a  '  Let  us  approach  Laoighis, 

Brown-haired  heroes  for  whom  show- 
ers fall ; 
The  great  territory  of  Laoighis  of 

slender  swords 
Belongs   to  O'Mordha,   bulwark   of 

battle, 
Of  the  golden  shield  of  one  colour.' 
—O'Hicidhrin. 
Laoighis,    pronounced    Lee-ish,    com- 
prised,  not    the    baronies    of    Upper 
Ossory,  Portnahinch,  and  Tinnahinch, 

K 


74  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Slewmargie].     The  Soyle  is  FruitfulP  and  Exceeding  pleasant, 


but   only   the    northern    and    eastern 
baronies  of  Queen's  Co. 

'  Lease  est  regiuncula  sylvestris  et 
uliginosa ;  primarium  oppidum  est 
Maryburgh,  ubi  cum  suo  Seneschallo 
praesidiarii  agunt,  qui  sese  aegre  defen- 
dunt  contra  CfMoores  (qui  se  ut  anti- 
quos  hujus  dominos  gerunt),  Mac-Gil- 
patrick,  O' Danpsios  et  alios,  malefica 
et  tumultiosa  hominum  genera,  qui  ad 
Anglos  deturbandos  nihil  non  quotidie 
moliuntur.'  —  Letterpress  prefixed  to 
Jansson's  old  Map  of  Leinster. 

b  '  It  seemed  incredible,  that  by  so 
barbarous  inhabitants  (as  the  people  of 
Leix)  the  ground  should  be  so  ma- 
nured, the  fields  so  orderly  fenced,  the 
Townes  so  frequently  inhabited,  and 
the  high  waies  and  paths  so  well 
beaten  as  the  Lord  Deputy  here  found 
them — the  reason  whereof  was  that  the 
Quecne 's  forces  during  these  warres  never 
till  then  came  among  them.  His  Lord- 
ship staying  in  Leax  till  the  twenty 
three  of  August  did  many  waies  weaken 
them — he  fought  with  them  every  day 
and  as  often  did  beate  them — our 
Captaines  and,  by  their  example  (for  it 
was  otherwise  painful)  the  common 
souldiers  did  cut  down  with  their 
swords  all  the  Rebels  corne  to  the 
value  often  thousand  pound  and  up- 
ward, the  only  means  by  which  they  ivere 
to  live,  and  to  keepe  their  Bonaghts 
(or  hired  souldiers).' — Moryson,  Lrc- 
land  anno  1600,  p.  77. 

'  The   Lord  Deputy's  journey   into 


the  Queen's  Co.  in  1600.' — Vol.  601  of 
Carew  MSS.  'Aug.  14.  His  Lordship 
left  Sir  J.  FitzPiers  and  Sir  H.  Follyott 
with  400  men,  "to  fall  into  Leix  another 
way  that  night  for  a  prey;  Aug.  15. 
Rory  McRory  with  100  Kerne  skir- 
mished with  them  and  they  got  no 
prey.  The  L.  Deputy  burned  and 
spoiled  Keating's  country  and  the  corn 
thereabouts."  Aug.  16.  He  sent  Sir  O. 
Lambert  with  600  foot  who  marched 
through  the  fastness  of  Slemarge,  spoil- 
ing their  plots  of  corn  within  the  woods, 
burning  their  towns,  with  some  skir- 
mish in  the  passes.  His  Lordship 
coasted  along  the  plain  "  burning  and 
spoiling  likewise.  At  the  river  there 
were  some  skirmishes.  Aug.  17.  En- 
camped at  Ferney  Abbey.  The  army 
marching  along  the  valley,  the  rebels 
coasted  along  the  mountains.  Divers 
of  them  came  from  the  hill  waving  us 
to  them  with  their  swords,  and  calling 
us,  as  their  manner  is,  with  railing 
speeches."  Aug.  18  and  19.  The  army 
passed  to  Kilgighy  in  Ossory,  "  all  the 
way  we  burned  all  their  houses  in  their 
fastnesses  and  woods."  Aug.  22.  We 
spoiled  the  corn  about  Teig  Fitz- 
Patrick's  Castle.' — Car.  Cal.,  p.  432. 

On  the  5  th  of  Sep.  the  Deputy  wrote 
to  Carew :  '  With  800  foot  and  1 00 
horse  I  entered  Leixe,  burned  and 
spoiled  all  their  towns  and  cut  down 
their  corn  ;  Owny  McRory  wrote  to 
the  Earl  of  Onnond  desiring  him  "  to 
stay   this   execrable    and    abominable 


THE  QUENES  COUNTIE. 


75 


and  hath  on  the  one  Side  the  River  Barrow,  and  through  a  great 
part  thereof  the  River  Newer  [N ore]  well  Sorted  with  plaines 
and  Woods.0  This  Countie  being  throughlie  conquered  by  the 
Earle  of  Sussex  was  planted  with  a  mixed  people  of  Inglysh  and 
Irish,  and  in  the  tyme  of  King  Phillip  and  Quene  Marie  this 
Countrie  was  called  by  the  name  of  the  Quenes  Countie,  and  the 


course  (for  so  he  termed  it)  of  cutting 
down  green  corn."  On  our  return  the 
rebels  charging  our  men  hotly  were 
beaten  back.' — Car.  Cat. 

Owny  declared  himself  'outraged  by 
the  abominable  new  device  of  Mount- 
joy,  to  cut  down  green  corn  wherever 
he  goes — an  execrable  course  and  a 
bad  example  to  all  the  world.  The 
English  had  taught  him  bad  lessons 
before,  and  as  they  do  not  mean  to 
give  over  schooling  him  in  bad  actions, 
which  he  protests  he  loathes,  he  de- 
clares he  will  give  over  tillage  and  take 
to  living  on  the  tilling  of  others.'— See 
his  letter  published  in  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 

c  There  is  in  the  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 
a  fac-simile  of  an  ancient  map  of  Leix, 
Ofaly,  etc.,  which  was  made  circ.  1563. 
It  excels  all  other  Irish  maps  in  archaeo- 
logical interest — it  exhibits  the  huge 
and  wide  mountains  of  Slievebloom 
and  Slievecomar,  the  primeval  forests, 
as  'the  great  wood;'  the  vast  heaths 
and  morasses  as  Frugh-more  (the  great 
heath  of  Maryborough)  and  part  of  the 
bog  of  Allen  ;  fort  '  Protectour '  (now 
Maryborough) ;  the  old  feudal  for- 
tresses of  Lea,  Geashill,  and  Dunamase; 
smaller  castellated  houses  of  Celtic 
chiefs  ;    the  smaller  dwellings   of  the 


bards,  brehons,  and  physicians ;  clus- 
ters of  cabins ;  considerable  monas- 
teries such  as  Abbey-Leix,  Killeigh, 
and  Monasterevan ;  a  sprinkling  of 
small  churches ;  and  some  evidences 
of  an  armed  settlement  as  '  Castle 
Cosby,'  '  Castle  Pigot.'  The  sylvan 
condition  of  the  land  is  remarkable  ; 
the  '  passes '  or  rude  roads  through  the 
bogs  and  these  '  backwoods  '  of  the 
Pale  are  marked  also.  Finglas  wrote 
in  1529  that  among  the  most  dangerous 
passes  were  '  two  passes  in  Feemore 
{Fiadh-mor  or  great  wood)  in  O'More's 
country.'  In  1548  a  pass  in  Leix  was 
described  as  three  miles  long  through 
a  forest  of  great  timber  mingled  with 
hazel ;  and  in  a  state  paper  we  are  told 
the  Irish  '  repute  the  great  woods  of 
oak  no  fastness,  but  the  thyke  woods 
of  hassel  and  sallies  they  take  for  great 
assurance.' — Description  of  an  Ancient 
Map  of  Leix  by  H.  F.  Hore,  Esq. 

Leis  was  divided  into  seven  parts, 
the  boundaries  of  which  met  at  a  stone 
called  Leac-Riada,  on  the  plain  of 
Magh  J?iada,  now  Morett  ;  these  re- 
gions were  under  seven  petty  kings, 
who  were  subject  to  an  Arch-King, 
called  J?igh-J?iada,  who  resided  at 
Dunamase. 


76 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


chief  Towne  called  Marieborroughe,  as  the  next  Countie  was 
called  by  the  name  of  Kings  Countie  and  the  chief  Towne 
thereof  called  Phillipstowne.  The  new  planted  Inhabitants 
Hath  bene  so  molested  continuallie  with  the  multitudes  of  the 
first  Natives  thereof,  and  the  Omoores,  and  especially  at  this 
present,  as  that  they  have  in  a  manner  recovered  the  Countrie 
againe  and  Expelled  all  the  Inglysh  Inhabitants  saving  3  or  4 
which  contayne  themselves  within  their  Castles  till  they  be 
relieved  from  Ingl.  These  Omoores  was  almost  extinct,  but 
they  have  increased  againe  chieflie  for  lack  of  good  Govern- 
ment/ and  due  observation  of  such  Orders  as  were  appointed 


d  This  is  unjust  to  the  government 
of  Sir  H.  Sydney,  who  thus  tells  us  in 
his  'Memoir  '  what  he  did  to  extinguish 
and  extirpe  the  O' Mores  :  'Rory  Oge 
O'More  was  the  sonne  of  another 
Rorye,  chief  of  the  O'M,  and  Captain 
of  the  country  called  Leish  who  mar- 
ried a  daughter  of  the  Earl  of  Ormond 
(and  was  first  cousin  of  the  tenth  Earl). 
He  called  himself  O'More.  Against 
him  in  1578  I  advanced,  being  of 
horsemen  and  footmen  a  right  good 
force  ;  but  he  would  not  abide  me,  nor 
I  overtake  him  ;  he  carried  away  cap- 
tive, to  my  heart's  grief,  my  lieutenant, 
Sir  Harrie  Harrington,  my  most  dear 
sister's  son.  I  made  on  him  as  actual 
and  cunning  a  ?ca  r re  as  I  could;  I  besett 
his  cabanish  dwelling  with  good  sol- 
diers and  excellent  good  executioners  ; 
he  had  within  it  twenty-six  of  his  best 
men,  his  wife  and  his  marcial's  wief, 
and  Cormac  O'Connor,  an  ancient  and 
rank  rebel  of  long  mentyned  in  Scot- 
land.    All  were  killed,  his  wife  and  all 


his  men  ;  only  there  escaped  himself 
and  his  marshall  called  Shane  McRory 
Reagh,  in  trouth  most  miraculously, 
for  they  crept  between  the  legs  of  the 
soldiers  into  the  fastness  of  the  plashes 
of  trees.  The  soldiers  saved  the  mar- 
shal's wife.' — Sydney. 

As  Shane  O'Neill  was  subdued  by 
the  Scots,  Desmond  by  Ormond,  and 
the  Kavanaghs  by  the  Butlers,  so  were 
the  O'Mores  ruined  by  their  neigh- 
bours and  kinsmen,  the  McGillapatricks. 
'Mc6illapatrick,  Baron  of  Upper  Ossory, 
my  particular  sworn  brother,'  says 
Sydney,  '  was  the  faithfullest  man  for 
martial  action  that  ever  I  found  of  that 
country.  He  followed  O'More  with 
great  skill  and  cunning  and  with  much 
or  more  courage  assailed  him  and  made 
the  best  fight  with  him  that  ever  I 
heard  of  between  Irishmen.  Rory 
was  killed  by  a  household  servant  of 
the  Baron's ;  his  marshall  escaped,  and 
the  rebel's  bodye,  though  dead  was  so 
well  attended  and  carried  away  as  it 


THE  QUENES  COUNTIE. 


77 


to  the  Livetennants  thereof  by  the  Earle  of  Sussex,  (To  wit) 
that  the  Freeholders  of  this  Countie,  and  the  King's  Countie 
be  compelled  to  keep  for  their  own  defence  the  Horsemen  and 
Footmen,  which  they  are  bound  to  keep  by  their  Tenures,  which 
if  it  had  been  put  to  Execution  without  any  charge  to  the 
Ouene  had  bene  able  to  have  suppressed  any  power  that  the 
Rebells  cou'd  have  raysed  against  them.  The  Capten  of  these 
Omoores  at  this  present  is  one  Orory  McRorie — who  is  not 
able  to  make  of  himself  above  160  or  180  Footemen  ;e  but  when- 


was  the  cause  of  the  death  of  a  good 
many  men  on  both  sides  ;  yet  carried 
away  it  was.' — Sydney's  Memoirs. 

e  When  Owny  captured  Ormond  on 
the  ioth  Apr.  1600,  'he  had,'  says 
Carew,  '  500  foot  and  20  horse,  the 
best  furnished  men  for  the  war  and  the 
best  apparelled  that  we  have  seen  in 
this  kingdom,  whereof  300  were 
bonaghes.' — Carew  to  Privy  Council, 
April  18,  1600.  In  April  1599,  'Owny 
with  the  rest  of  the  Moores  and  their 
followers  were  600,  of  whom  30  are 
horse.' — Car.  Cal. 

'  The  best  service  done  at  that  time 
was  the  killing  of  Owny,  a  bloody  and 
bold  yong  man,  who  had  lately  taken 
the  Earl  of  Ormond  prisoner  and  had 
made  great  stirres  in  Mounster.  He 
was  chief  of  the  O'Mores  and  by  his 
death  they  were  so  discouraged  that 
they  never  after  held  up  their  heads. 
Also  a  bold  bloody  rebel  Callogh  Mac- 
Walter  (O'More)  was  at  the  same  time 
killed. ' — At  or y son. 

'  Callogh  McVValter,  the  most  bloody 
rebel    in     Leinster,     was     killed     in 


helping  of  Owny ;  after  the  skirmish, 
we  heard  that  Owny,  being  mortally 
wounded,  and  fearing  his  head  should 
come  into  the  L.  Deputy's  hands,  had 
willed  it  to  be  cut  off  and  buried  after 
his  death,  and  he  appointed  Owny 
A'PShane  to  be  O'Moore.'  'L.  Mount- 
joy's  Journey.' —  Car.  Cal.  '  Uaitne,  son 
of  Rury  Oge,  son  of  Rury  Caoch 
O'Moore,  an  illustrious,  renowned  and 
celebrated  gentleman,  by  right  the  sole 
heir  to  his  territory,  had  wrested  the 
government  of  his  patrimony  by  the 
prowess  of  his  hand  and  the  resolute- 
ness of  his  heart  from  the  hands  of 
foreigners,  brought  it  under  his  own 
sway,  and  under  the  government  of  his 
stewards  and  bonnaghts  according  to 
Irish  usage,  so  that  there  was  not  a  vil- 
lage from  one  extremity  of  his  patri- 
mony to  the  other  which  he  had  not  in 
his  possession  except  Port-Leix  alone.' 
— Four  Masters.  According  to  Dym- 
7110k,  p.  32,  'Owny  challenged  Essex 
to  fight  50  of  his  with  50  of  ours  with 
sworde  and  target  which  was  consented 
to  by  the  L.   Lieutenant;  but  Owny 


78 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


soever  he  inter) deth  any  Robberie  or  Spoyle  he  is  assisted 
partlie  with  his  Neighbours  of  the  King's  Countie  the  Oconnors 
partlie  by  Phelim  McFeughe  whose  coosen  germaine  he  is,  and 
partlie  by  Capten  Tyrrell  who  is  readie  with  his  Companie  to 
assist  ether  the  Omoores  or  the  Oconnors  or  the  Omelaghlanes 
for  in  any  Sudden  and  present  exployt.  This  Countie  is  bounded 
with  the  Countie  of  Kilkenny  to  the  South,  with  Tipperairie  to 
the  West,  with  the  Kings  Countie  and  the  mountaynes  of 
Slewblowe  to  the  North,  and  the  River  Barrow  to  the  East. 
It  is  governed  by  Sr  Vaughan  S'  Leger  who  hath  a  commission 
of  Lieutenancy  for  the  Countie.  The  chief  Towne  whereof  is 
Marieborrow  ruled  by  a  Portrise,  and  wherein  is  a  Fort  garded 
with  150  Footmen  or  Sometymes  200,  as  need  requireth,  and 
some  few  Horsemen. 


The  chef  Castles  :f 


The  Quene's  Fort 

The  Shyan 

The  Abbey  of  Lease 

Stradbellie 

Pallace 


Dunas 

Blackfort 

Baleclockan 

Disert 

Balliadams 


Principal 
Irysh  Gentlemen  ;s 


Sir  Henrie  Power  Lieutenant  and 
constable  of  the  Fort 


never  came  to  perform  it.' — See  about 
his  fight  with  Essex  at  the  Pass  of  the 
Plumes  in  O'Sullivan  Beare's  Historia 
Cath. 

f '  Master  Hartpol,  Mr-  Bowen  and 
Mr  Pygot  were  the  only  English  in- 
habitants, by  whom  and  some  others 
certaine  castles  were  kept  for  the 
Queen,  besides  the  Fort  of  Maria- 
borough  kept  by  the  Queen's  Garrison.' 


'  The  English  foote  at  Leax  and  the 
Barow  side  were  Sir  Warham  S1,  Leger 
150  f,  Sir  F.  Rush  150,  Captaine  John 
Fitz-Piers  150,  and  Mr-  Hartpoole  10.' 
— Aforyson. 

K  Cosby  (?)  at  Stradbally ;  Cosby  at 
Castle  Dirrhy  ;  Harpoole  of  Coolbane- 
ghar,  he  is  constable  of  Catherlagh 
Castle  ;  Bowen  of  BallyAdams  ;  Ed- 
ward Brierton  of  Laghtiog  ;  Pigotts  of 


THE  QUENES  COUNTIE. 


79 


Alexander  Cosbie 

William  Harpole 

Robert  Bowen 

Bruerton 

Rob'  Pio-grot  of  the  desert 

Young  Davels 


Barrington11 


]  of  Ireland 


Freeholders  of  the  [ 
The  Earle  of  Kildare 
The  Barron  of  upper  Ossyrrie' 
Pierce  Butler  Brother  to  the  Earle  of  Ormond 
O  Dunnek 

Bryan   McCalloghe  McDonell,1  and  many  other    inferior  Free- 
holders. 


Dysart ;  John  Barrington  of  Cowlniagh. 
Earl  of  Kildare  at  Moyrit  and  Tymog; 
Hovendon  at  Taukardstowne,  Hether- 
ington  at  Tully,  Sir  Thos.  Colclough 
of  Ballyknockan,  Loftus  of  Tymoghoe, 
Whytney  of  Shyan,  Hugh  Boy  Clan 
Donnell  of  Tenne-Killeh ;  Edmund 
MacDonell  of  Rhahin,  Tirence 
O'Dempsey  of  Ballybrittas. —  Car.  Cal., 
p.  r9i. 

h  In  fighting  with  the  O'Mores  there 
fell,  i°the  son  of  Captain  John  Barring- 
ton,  2°  Joseph  Barrington,  30  Thomas 
Lighe,  second  husband  of  Mrs.  Barring- 
ton. 

'  Florence  FitzPatrick  or  Fineen 
MacGillapatrick,  son  of  Brian,  the  first 
Baron.  He  and  his  father  mainly  con- 
tributed to  ruin  the  O'Mores ;  but  his 
son  Teig  was  opposed  to  the  English. 


■ — See  Car.  Cal.  year  1600.  O'Dugan 
says,  '  MacGillapatric  of  the  fine  seat, 
noble  fairfaced  is  the  tribe  of  the  resi- 
dence of  the  head  chieftain.'  Lord 
Castletown  is  descended  of  this  family. 
k  '  Over  Ui-Rigan  of  heavy  routs, 

A  vigorous   tribe   who    conquer  in 
battle, 

Is  O'Duinn,  chief  of  demolition, 

Hero  of  the  golden  battle  spears.' 

—  O '  Huidhrin. 

Iregan  is  co-extensive  with  the 
barony  of  Tinnahinch.  General  Fran- 
cis Dunn,  M.P.,  is  the  head  of  the 
O'Dunnes  of  Iregan. 

1 '  This  county  of  Leax,  lately  all 
English  is  now  usurped  by  O'More  and 
all  the  sept  of  the  O'Mores,  and  the 
chiefe  of  the  galloglasses  in  that 
county   of  the   sept  of    MacDonnell, 


8o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Ancient  endwellersm 
The  whole  race  of  the  Omoores  were  excluded  from  having 
residence  here  by  act  of  Parliament  An0  2°  Phill.  &  maria. 

use  weapon  or  armor  in  serving  of  any 
other  but  her  Majesty,'  etc. — Sir  E. 
Burrowes  in  Ulster  J.  of  Arch. 

About  this  time  1598  the  castles  and 
towns  of  Rahin  and  Derry,  belonging 
to  McEdmund  McDonnell  of  Queen's 
Co.,  were  forfeited  and  given  to  Sir  R. 
Greame.  In  1631  James  MCD.  got  a 
patent  of  his  estates  of  Tennekille  in- 
cluding 30  townlands  ;  but  was  obliged 
to  agree  that  'his  sons  and  servants 
shall  use  English  dress  and  language, 
and  he  and  they  and  all  the  males 
under  their  controul  between  the  ages  of 
1 6  and  60  shall  present  themselves  every 
year  before  the  constable  of  Mary- 
borough and  get  their  names  inscribed.' 
In  1 64 1  James  MCD.  of  Tenekille  was 
a  Confederate  colonel.'— J.  Huband 
Smith.  The  McDonnells  are  still  found 
about  Strahard  and  Portarlington,  but 
as  peasants  and  blacksmiths  on  the 
lands  of  their  galloglas  ancestors. — 
J.  McGrady  in  No.  7  Ulst.  J.  of  Arch. 

mThe  seven  septs  of  Leix  were  the 
the  O'Mores,  O'Kellys,  O'Lalors, 
O'Devoys,  McEvoys,  O'Dorans,  and 
O'Dowlings. — See  an  account  of  them 
in  C  Byrne's  History  of  Queen's  County. 
From  Ruary  O'More,  Prince  of  Leix  in 
1555,  is  descended  the  Right  Hon.  R. 
More-O'Ferrall  of  Balyna. 

The  names  Cosby,  Bowen,  Fitz- 
Patrick,  Butler,  Dunne,  and  Lalor  are 
still  among  the  '  County  Families.' — 
See  Walford. 


the  sept  of  O'Dempsies  (except  Sir 
Terence  O'Dempsey),  the  sept  of 
O'Doyne,  except  Teig  Oge  O'Doyne.' 
— Moryson. 

In  Nos.  5  and  6  of  the  Ulster  J.  of 
Arch,  there  are  interesting  accounts  of 
the  McDonnells  of  Tennekille  Castle 
by  J.  Huband  Smith,  Esq.,  and  by 
Sir  Erasmus  Burrowes,  Bart.  From 
them  we  extract  the  following  details  : 
The  Castle  of  Tennekille  (teach  mi 
coille  or  house  of  the  wood)  was  built 
arc.  1450;  it  is  remarkable  for  its 
skilful  design,  groined  ceiling,  and  fin- 
ished execution  ;  a  few  patriarchs  of 
the  forest  still  remain,  venerable  com- 
panions of  the  old  keep.  In  1578  an 
agreement  was  entered  into  between 
the  L.  Deputy  and  '  the  three  chiefe 
Captains  of  the  three  septs  of  Clan- 
donnells  of  Leinster,  her  Majesty's 
Galloglas,  viz. — Turlogh  Oge  McAlex- 
ander  of  Wicklow,  M'Edmund  McDon- 
nell of  Rahin  and  Hugh  Boy  McDon- 
nell of  Tennekille.'  It  was  agreed 
that — '  In  consideration  of  the  auntient 
and  continued  fydelytie,  loyaltye  and 
true  service  of  the  Capitaynes,  gent  and 
septs  of  the  said  Clandonnills,  the 
Bonaghts  dead  payes,  and  black-mail, 
heretofore  levied,  shall  be  commuted 
into  a  yearly  pencon  of  ^300  to  be 
paid  out  of  her  Majesty's  exchequer, 
unto  th'  ands  of  the  said  three  chief 
captains — Provided  that  henceforth 
none  of  the  said  Capitaynes  .  .  .  shall 


THE  KING  S  COUNTIE. 


81 


THE  KING'S  COUNTIE. 

The  Countie  being  in  tymes  past  called  Offalya  was  inhabited 
by  the  O'Connors,  a  wicked  and  Rebellious  people,  which  for 
their  sundrie  Rebellions  were  by  the  Earle  of  Sussex  in  the 
tyme  of  Quene  Marie  banished  and  disinherited,  their  Countrie 
converted  into  Shyre  ground  and  called  the  King's  Countie,b 
and  the  chief  Towne  thereof  called  Phillipstowne  appointed  to 
be  ruled  by  a  portrise  as  Marieborroughe. 

This  Shyre  contayneth  all  the  Land  between  the  Countie  of 
Kildare  and  the  River  of  Sheynen  including  all  the  Clonmillier 
or  O'Dempsies  Countrie  on  both  sides  of  the  Barrow  also  Galline 


a  '  King's  County  consisteth  of  Offaly 
lately  possessed  by  the  O'Connors ; 
Fercal  of  the  O'Meloyes ;  Moynter- 
tagan  or  Foxe's  cuntrie  possessed  by 
the  Foxes ;  Delvin  McCoghlan  of  the 
McCoghlans ;  and  that  parcel  of  Glen- 
maliry  possessed  by  the  O'Demsies.' — 
Endorsement  on  Ancient  Map  of  Idrone 
in  the  Rolls'  House,  London. 

There  is  as  much  of  O'Faley  in 
Queen's  Co.  as  in  the  King's  Co. ;  and 
the  baronies  of  Garrycastle,  Bally- 
cowan.  Fercal,  Clonlish  and  Ballybritt 
were  never  included  in  O'Faley. 

Ui-Failghe,  i.e.,  the  descendants  of 
Failghe,  eldest  son  of  Cathaoir  Mor,  in- 
habited originally  the  baronies  of  East 
and  West  Offaly  in  Kildare,  of  Portna- 
hinch  and  Tinnahinch  in  Queen's  Co., 
and  that  part  of  King's  Co.  comprised 
in  the  diocese  of  Kildare  and  Leighlin. 


The  O'Conors  were  chiefs  of  this  terri- 
tory till  the  reign  of  Philip  and  Mary, 
when  they  were  dispossessed,  and  then 
the  O'Dempsies  became  the  most  pow- 
erful families  till  the  Revolution  in  1688. 
— Note  to  Irish  Topographical  Poem. 
The  'Lords  of  Offaly,  the  land  of 
Cattle,  are  not  unknown  to  the  poets, 
they  spend  their  lands  on  knowledge  ; 
O'Conor  is  the  hero  of  the  plain,  on  the 
green  round  hill  of  Cruachan.' — Top. 
Poem. 

b  '  O'Connor  of  Ofaly  was  the  scourge 
of  the  Englishry,'  from  whose  rich  do- 
mains in  Meath  he  levied  a.  '  black ' 
rent  equivalent  to  j£,\ 0,000  a  year  [i.e., 
,£300  at  that  time).  His  territory  was 
'  the  gall  of  the  Pale,'  '  the  doore 
whereby  myche  warre  and  myschyff 
entered  emong  the  subjects.' — Irish 
Archaol.  Miscellany. 


82  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 

and  ferecall,  or  Omeloyes  Countrie  the  Shenaughe  or  O'Foxes 
Countrie  and  Delvin  McCoghlane  commonlie  called  McCoghlanes 
Countrie  to  the  brink  of  the  Sheynen  nere  Myllick.  So  it  is 
bounded  East  with  the  Countie  of  Kildare,  West  with  the 
Sheynen  and  with  Westmeath,  South  with  the  Ouenes  Countie 
and  Slewblow  and  Elie  or  O'Carrells  Countrie,  and  North  with 
Meath  there  is  no  Towne  in  it  but  Phillipstowne. 

Principall  Castles       The  Fort  called  Dingan  in  Phillipstoune, 

Croughan  belonging  to  Sr  Thomas  Moore, 
Balliburlie,  belonging  to  Sr  George  Cowlie, 
Baliburtane     belonging      to      Sr     Henrie 

Warren,  Munster-Oris, 
Castlejordan, 

Eden     Durick     belonging    to    Sr     Edw. 
Harbert. 

Chief  Gent.c  The  Earle  of  Kildare, 

Sr  George  Bouchier,        \ 
Sr  Edward  Moore,  Con- 
stable of  the  Fort, 
Sr  Henrie  Warren,  >  Knights. 

Sr  Thomas  Moore, 
Sr  George  Cowley, 
Sr  Edward  Herbert, 
Capten  Brabazon's  Sonnes, 
Sanchie, 
Tyrrell, 

c  Sir  Henry  Warren  at  Ballybrittan  ;  Sir  John  Tirrell  at  Blacklowne ;  Francis 

Sir  Thomas  Moore  at  Croghan  ;   Sir  Herbert   at   Monaster-Orys ;    Thomas 

George  Colly  at  Edenderrie  ;  Sir  Edw.  Wakeley   at   Ballyburley. '—  Car.    Cat. 

Herbert  at  Dorrown  ;  Nicholas  Sanky  ;  an.  1596. 


THE  KING  S  COUNTIE. 


83 


Of  the  Irysh  Freeholders  :d 

Gerrot  Fitzgerrald, 

Thomas  Fitzgerrald, 

the  Sonnes  of  Neall  McGeogaghan,c 

McCoyhlanf  and  his  sept, 

Omoloys  and  his  sept, 


d  Garret  FitzGerald  at  Corbetstown  ; 
Redmond  Og  FitzG.  at  Clownebolche  ; 
Wm-  FitzG.  at  Geishell  ;  John  Raynolds 
at  Cloyduff ;  Barnaby  Connor  at  Derry- 
mollin. —  Car.  Cal. 

e  Mageoghegan's  country  of  Kinalea 
(Cinel-Fiachach)  originally  extended 
from  Birr  in  King's  Co.  to  Uisnech  in 
Westmeath;  but  subsequently  the 
O'Molloys,  a  junior  branch  of  the 
Cinal-Fiachach,  asserted  their  sway 
over  the  southern  portion.  Mageo- 
ghan's  territory  was  co-extensive  with 
the  barony  of  Moycashel.  Of  this  race 
were  R.  Mageoghegan,  the  heroic  de- 
fender of  Dunboy  in  1602,  Connell  M. 
of  Lismoyny,  who  translated  the  Annals 
of  Clonmacnoise  in  1627,  and  the  Abbe" 
M.  who  wrote  the  Histoire  d'Jrlande. 
Sir  R.  Nagle  inherited  the  property  of 
the  last  chieftain,  from  whom  he  was 
maternally  descended. —  O'D.  Note  to 
Top.  Poem. 

'  The  manly  sept,  the  illustrious 
Clan  Geoghagan,  host  of  the  girdles, 
comely  their  complexion.' — O 'Dugan. 

' '  John  MacCoghlan  of  Coghlan.' — 
Car.  Cal. 

'  MacCochlan  whose  children  are 
beauteous  to  behold,  King  of  Dealbhna- 
Eathra.' — 0' Dugan.   His  territory  com- 


prised the  present  barony  of  Garrycastle, 
except  the  parish  of  Lusmagh.  The 
family  retained  their  territory  till  this 
century  when  they  were  succeeded  by 
the  O'Dalys  and  Armstrongs,  who  are 
descended  maternally  from  the  Mac- 
Cochlans.  Mr.  Coghlan  of  Castlebar 
is  head  of  one  of  the  most  respectable 
families  of  this  stock. — 0' Donovan's 
Notes  to  O' Daly's  Tribes  of  Ireland. 
About  1249  Conor  M'Coghlan  of  the 
Castles  was  'a  great  destroyer  of  the 
English.' 

s  '  Connell  O'Moloy  of  Ralyhen'— 
Car.  Cal.  O'Molloy's  territory  com- 
prised the  baronies  of  Fircal  or  Eglish, 
Ballycown  and  Ballyboy.  '  O'Mulloy 
King  of  Feara-Ceall  of  ancient  swords, 
noble  the  surname  ;  every  sword  was 
tried  by  him.'  The  head  of  the  sept 
in  1588  was  Connell  son  of  Caher, 
whose  grandson  was  Chief  in  1677. 
D.  Molloy,  Esq.,  of  Clonbela,  Birr, 
is  supposed  to  be  the  present  repre- 
sentative of  the  family.— O' Donovan. 

'  When  Calais  was  taken,  I  during 
the  Christmas  holidays  upon  a  sudden 
invaded  Fyrcal,  or  O'Molloys  country, 
burned  and  wasted  the  same ;  on  my 
return  was  fought  with  by  the  O'Conors, 
O'Mores,  and  O'Molloy,  and  the  people 


84 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Odempsieh  and  his  sept, 
OFoxe'  and  his  sept, 


of  Mackgochigan,  albeit  he  was 
with  me  in  person  in  that  skirmish ; 
I  received  in  a  freize  jerkin  (though 
armed  under  it)  four  or  five  Irish  ar- 
rows.'— Lord  Deputy  Sydney's  Memoir. 

'On  the  10th  of  March  1596,  my 
Lord  Deputy  (Russell)  went  from 
Durrough  to  Rathmagolduld  (Tege 
O'Molloyes).  The  chief  of  the  O'M. 
with  other  gentlemen  and  some  kerne 
met  my  Lord  and  declared  that  the 
Scots  were  burning  the  country  within 
view.  His  Lordship  sent  100  shot 
with  certaine  kerne  under  the  guiding 
of  O'Moloy,  and  assisted  by  McGoghlin 
they  fell  upon  the  Scots  at  break  of 
day  and  slew  140  of  them,  others  being 
drowned.' — Russell's  Journal,  Car.  Ceil. 

O'Molloy —  (J Maolmuidh  (Conal  son 
of  Cahir)  died  in  the  spring  of  1599, 
and  his  son  Calvach  took  his  place, 
being  appointed  by  the  Queen.  Some 
of  the  gentlemen  of  his  tribe  contended 
with  him  for  that  name,  according  to 
the  Irish  law  of  tanistic  succession. — 
Four  Masters. 

h  '  Noble  the  degree  of  their  race, 
a  smooth  plain  this  sept  have  defended, 
the  land  is  hereditary  to  O'Diomosaigh.' 
— O '  Huidhrin.  Their  land  of  Clann 
Maoilug/ira,  or  Clanmaliere,  embraced 
the  baronies  Portnahinch  in  Queen's 
Co.,  and  of  Upper  Philipstown  in 
King's  Co.  Their  chief  was  ennobled 
by  Charles  I.  '  There  was  a  Terence 
Dempsy  of  Clonegawny  ;'  also  a  Sir  Ter- 


ence O'Denrpsye  lived  at  Ballybrittas  ; 
the  Earl  of  Ormond  was  imprisoned  in 
his  castle  by  O'More  in  1600.  Gla- 
shane  O'D.  and  Lisagh  O'D.  with  the 
rest  of  the  O'Dempsies  were  in  actual 
rebellion  in  1599. — Car.  Cal. 

'  '  Hubart  Fox  of  Lehinche.' — Car. 
Cal.  The  Foxes  or  Sinnachs  were 
'  O'Caharny's,  Kings  of  Teffia— the 
brown  oaks  of  the  valleys,  the  protection 
and  bounty  of  Erin,  of  whom  robbers 
were  afraid.'  O'Dugaji.  The  Foxes 
owned  Mui/iler  Tadhgain,  which  be- 
came the  barony  of  Kilcoursey.  Darcy 
Fox  of  Foxville,  in  Co.  Meath,  is  be- 
lieved to  be  the  head  of  this  clan. 
Fox  of  Foxhall  in  Longford  is  of  this 
family,  and  is  descended  from  Sir 
Patrick  Fox,  Clerk  of  the  Privy  Council 
of  Dublin  from  1588  to  1610. 

The  following  extract  from  a  Patent 
Roll  shows  the  extent  and  sub- 
division of  Fox's  country  in  1598  : — 
'  Hubert  Foxe  of  Lahinchie  Barony 
Kilcoursie,  alias  the  Foxe  his  countrie, 
Gent.,  commonly  called  The  Foxe, 
chief  of  his  name,  by  deed  dated  1  May 
1599  surrendered  to  the  Queen  all  his 
estate  temporal  and  spiritual  within  the 
whole  barony  and  territory  of  Kil- 
courcie,  with  intent  that  her  Maty 
should  regrant  the  same  to  him  in  tail 
male.  Wherefore  from  Richmond,  Jan. 
29,  1599,  her  Maty  granted  the  same 
to  him  and  his  heirs  male,  remainder 
to  his  nephew  Brissel  F.   son  of  his 


THE  KING'S  COUNTIE.  85 

The  old  Inhabitants,  O'Connors,11  was  by  act  of  Parliament 


brother  Arte,  to  his  uncle  Owen  F.  of 
Lissinuskie,  to  Phelim  F.  of  Tolghan 
ne  Brenny,  to  Brissel  F.  of  Kilmaledie, 
son  of  Neil  F.  who  died  lately  in  the 
Queen's  service,  with  power  to  keep  a 
Court  Baron  and  a  Court  Leet,  hereby 
appointing  him  Seneschal  of  that 
Barony.' — Irish  Arch.  Misc.,  Vol  I. 

n  '  The  O'Conors  Faly,  namely  the 
descendants  of  Brian,  the  son  of  Cahir, 
son  of  Con,  son  of  Calvagh,  were  for 
three  or  four  years  in  the  Irish  Con- 
federation up  to  this  time  (1600). 
During  this  period  they  took  and  de- 
stroyed the  most  of  the  castles  of  Offaly, 
and  indeed  all  except  Dangan  (Philips- 
town)  and  a  few  others.  About  Lam- 
mas this  year  1600  the  L.  Deputy  came 
into  Offaly  with  scythes  and  sickles, 
and  destroyed  or  reaped  the  ripe  and 
unripe  crops  ;  the  consequence  of  this 
was  that  the  inhabitants  fled  to  Ulster 
and  other  territories,  where  they  re- 
mained to  the  end  of  the  year.' — Four 
Masters,  an.  1600. 

'  Henry  Cooley,  seneschal  of  the 
county  with  other  English  freeholders 
are  sore  pressed  by  the  O'Conors,  of 
whom  Cormac  O'Conor  is  chief,  and 
by  the  Clandonnell  Galliglasses,  a 
naughty  race  and  disposed  to  rebellion.' 
— State  Paper. 

'Nugent  of  Dysert,  M.P.  for  West- 
meath  in  15S5,  m.  a  dau.  of  the  Great 
O'Conor  Offaley.'— Lodge. 

'  Shortly  after  the  arrival  of  Essex  the 
O'Connors  slew  500  English  horsemen 


and  wounded  their  commander.' — Lom- 
bard, p.  417.  About  the  same  time 
Cahir  Murtagh  and  John  O'Conor  of 
Offaly,  with  a  hundred  footmen  took 
by  assault  the  castle  of  Cruochan,  which 
was  defended  by  Sir  Thomas  More  and 
Lifford — all  the  garrison  was  slain.  The 
words  of  O 'Sullivan  are  :  '  Cathirius, 
Mauritius  et  Joannes  O'Conchures  Ip- 
halii  equites  cum  centum  peditibus, 
improviso,  scalis  altissimis  admotis 
Cruochanum  castellum,  quod  in  Iphalia 
principatu  Thomas  Morus  eques  Aura- 
tus  et  Liflirdus,  Angli  pnesidio  tenebant, 
ascendunt,  et  propugnatoribus  occisis 
expugnant' — O' Sullivan.  Lib.  v.  cap. 
8.     Hist.  Cath. 

When  Essex  was  in  Offaly  in  1599, 
Captain  William  Williams  sallied  forth 
from  Philipstown  with  '  300  men  to 
recover  a  pray  taken  that  morning  by 
the  rebels,  lost  60  of  his  men,  which 
fell  improvidently  between  three  ene- 
mies ambuscados.'  'A  porcion  of 
Offaly,  called  Fercal,  is  so  strong  as 
nature  could  devise  to  make  it  by  wood 
and  bogge,  hence  it  was  a  storehouse 
for  prays.  Essex  with  1200  foote  and 
200  horse  went  from  Derrow  to  Bally- 
cowen,  where  Sir  Conyers  Clifford, 
Governor  of  Connaught,  arrived  with  9 
companies  of  foote.  Sir  Conyers 
Clifford  was  sore  fought  with  at  the 
entrance  into  Fercall,  and  had  10  men 
slayne  and  40  hurte,  which  losse  was 
doubled  upon  the  rebel  by  the  virtue 
of  our  men  and  specially  of  Sir  Griffin 


86  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 

debarred  from  having  Frehold  here.  There  was  a  tyme  of  late 
when  this  Countie  governed  by  a  Livetenant  Sr  George 
Bowchier  grew  wealthie  and  was  verie  quiet,  both  because  it  is 
by  nature  strong,  and  few  passages,  and  those  well  garded ;  as 
also  because  the  Inhabitants  have  better  united  in  good  Will 
one  to  another,  and  have  better  observed  the  Constitutions 
appointed  unto  them,  than  their  Neighbors  of  Lease — besides 
they  were  in  the  beginning  of  her  Majesties  raigne  verie  well 
quieted  with  a  prosecution  which  the  old  Earle  of  Kildare  made 
upon  the  O'Connors  who  in  manner  did  wholly  extirpe  them. 
But  since  the  last  Rebellion  the  O'Connors  have  from  all 
quarters  gathered  themselves  together  againe  to  recover  their 
ancient  possessions,  which  in  a  Sort  they  have  done,  for  they 
have  ether  banished  the  most  of  the  Inglysh  that  dwelt  in  that 
Countrie,  or  else  constreyned  them  to  keep  within  their  Castles, 
and  albeit  there  are  40  knowen  to  be  of  the  race  of  the  O'Connors, 
yet  at  this  present  they  lead  of  themselves  their  followers,  and 
Strangers  almost  4000.  They  are  not  yet  agreed  who  shall  be 
the  chief;  4  men  contending  for  it  Moretoghe  oge,  Shane  Glasse, 
Donoghe  Pope,  and 

O'Foxe  and  O'Dempsie  themselves  kepe  in  but  most  of  their 
friends  and  followers  be  in  rebellion. 

Markham.     In  the  morning  Essex  sent  years  continuously  in  this  country ;  no 

into  the  woods  1000  choice  men  under  counties  were  more  dearly  purchased 

Sir  John  MacCoughlin,  Sir  Theobald  by  the  English   than  the  King's  and 

Dillon,  and  Sir  C.  S1-  Lawrence,  and  Queen's  Counties.   Even  the  occasional 

his  Lordship  with  the  rest  of  the  horse  notices  of  the  battles  of  the  O'Mores 

and  foot  took  up  the  fittest  places  to  and  O'Conors  for   these  two  counties 

second  them  ;  there  was  great  slaughter  would  supply  the  poet  or  historian  with 

of  the  rebels.' — Dymmok.  one  _ of  the  most  thrilling  episodes  in 

'  The  O'Conors,  Princes  of  Ofaly  and  Irish  history.'— Rev.  M.  Kelly's  Note  to 

the  O'Mores  princes  of  Leix  waged  war  O' Sullivan's  Hist.,  p.  88. 

on  the  English    for  more  than  sixty  °  '  The    O'Conors,    O'Mollyes    and 


THE  KING  S  COUNTIE. 


87 


Nere  unto  this  Countie  is  the  Countie  of  Elie  or  0'carroll'sp 
Countrie,  which  the  Earles  of  Ormond  have  of  long  tyme  chal- 
lenged to  have  belonged  to  their  Countie  Palatine  of  Tipperarie  ; 
but  by  reason  of  the  great  dessention  that  have  bene  betwixt 
the  Hous  of  Ormond  and  the  OCarrell's,  they  wou'd  never  yeald 
to  be  of  that  Countie.     This  Sr  Charles  0'Carrell'sq  Father  did 


O'donners  had  468  f.  and  12  h.  The 
English  foote  in  Offaly  are  Sir  H.  Cooly 
20  f.  Sir  H.  Warren  100  f.  Sir  Edward 
FitzGerald  100  f.  Sir  George  Cooly 
200  ;  Sir  G.  Boucher  100  f.  at  Philips- 
town.' — Moryson,  p.  43. 

'  Lords  to  whom  the  nut-trees  bend 
Are  the  Munitir-Cearoll  of  Biorra's  plain 
King  of  Ely  to  sweet  Bladhma, 
The  most  hospitable  mansion  in  Erin. 
Eight  cantreds,  eight  chieftains  east 
Under  the  King  of  Ely  of  the  land  of  cattle, 
Brave  the  host  gathering  a  prey, 
The  host  of  yellow  curling  hair.' 

—  Top.  Poem. 

In  1598  Ely  comprised  only  the 
baronies  of  Clonlisk  and  Ballybritt. 
The  freeholders  of  Sir  W.  O'Carroll  in 
1576  were  O'Flanagan,  McCorcran, 
O'Hagan,  O'Dooly,  McGilfoyle,  and 
O'Banan. — 0' Donovan's  Notes  to  Top. 
Poem. 

q  Sir  Charles  O'Carroll,  was  third 
son,  considered  illegitimate,  of  Sir 
William  O'C.  chief  of  Ely  O'Carroll  in 
the  present  King's  County.  In  1582 
he  succeeded  his  brother  John,  who 
was  murdered  by  his  kinsman  Mulrony 
O'C. ;  in  1 5 85  he  attended  the  Dublin 
Parliament,  and  in  1588  was  Knighted  ; 
in  1598  he  committed  an  act  of 
treachery  towards  some  Ulster  soldiers 


in  his  service.  The  Four  Masters  say  : 
'  Some  gentlemen  of  the  MacMahons 
with  one  hundred  soldiers  were  hired 
by  O'Carroll  (Calvach,  son  of  William 
Owen,  son  of  Ferganainm)  in  the  spring 
of  this  year  ;  and,  at  the  time  that  their 
wages  should  be  given  them,  O'C.  with 
his  people  went  to  them  by  night  and 
slew  them  on  their  beds  and  in  their 
lodging  houses.  He  hanged  some  of 
them  from  trees,  but  the  party  of  one 
village  made  their  escape.  The  evil 
fate  deserved  by  that  wicked  deed 
befell  Ely;  for  (in  Hugh  O'Neill's 
march  southwards)  nothing  was  left  in 
it  but  ashes  instead  of  corn,  and  embers 
in  place  of  its  mansions.  Great  num- 
bers of  their  men,  women,  sons  and 
daughters  were  left  in  a  dying  state, 
and  some  gentlemen  of  his  own  tribe 
were  left  in  opposition  to  O'Carroll  in 
the  territory.'  O'Carroll's  territory 
comprised  the  baronies  of  Clonlisk  and 
Ballybritt.  The  present  chief  of  the 
family  is  unknown  ;  the  senior  branch 
removed  to  America  in  Cromwell's 
time,  and  the  head  of  that  was  grand- 
father of  the  late  Marchioness  of 
Wellesley.  There  is  a  letter  of  this 
'  Ch.  O'Carroulle '  from  '  my  chamber 
at  London  this  present  Monday,  1595.' 


88 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1  598. 


yeald  himself  to  be  under  the  Government  of  the  Inglyshe,  and 
namelie  under  the  Government  of  the  livetenant  of  the  Kings 
Countie.  But  this  O'Carrell  having  committed  a  Slaughter 
upon  3  of  the  Earle  of  Ormond's  friends,  and  being  summoned 
to  abyde  a  Jurie  in  the  Countie  Palatyne  of  Tipperarie,  obtayned 
by  Letters  from  the  Ouene,  that  he  should  be  tried  by  the 
Inhabitants  of  the  Countie  of  Louth,  which  is  a  Countie  fan- 
distant  from  him.  This  Sr  Charles  O'Carrell  hath  continued 
his  duetifull  obedience  to  the  Quene/  notwithstanding  that  his 


It  is  'A  brief  note  of  territories  sub- 
tracted and  concealed  from  her  Majesty 
by  the  Erie  of  Ormond.'  They  were 
Dow  Arra  the  contre  of  MacBrien 
Arra,  O'Mulrian's  is  contre ;  Keelan  a 
longforta  or  Shane  Glasse  is  contre ; 
Dow  o  Loyaghe  or  MacWalter  is  contre; 
Murkrybyry  improperly  and  usurpedly 
called  Heither  Ormond,'  i.e.,  Upper 
and  Lower  Ormond. — State  Paper 
Office. 

'The  Queen  to  the  L.  Deputy  in 
1595 — 'Whereas  there  is  an  indictment 
presented  in  the  Co.  Tipperary  for  a 
slaughter  of  some  of  the  Cantwells  by 
Sir  C.  O'Caroll  the  said  Sir  Charles  has 
made  complaint  that  the  loss  of  his 
life  is  intended  by  means  of  that  in- 
dictment laid  in  Tipperary,  where  he 
is  mortally  hated  in  regard  of  divers 
spoils  between  his  country  of  Elye  and 
the  County  Palatine  ;  the  trial  is  to 
be  suspended  until  the  difference  of 
title  betwixt  the  Earl  of  Ormond  and 
Sir  C.  O'Caroll  be  determined  whether 
Elye  be  in  the  co.  Tipperary  or  not.' 

On  the  20th  of  July,  1600,  Carew 


writes  :  '  No  hour  passeth  within  this 
Kingdom  but  some  place  or  other  pro- 
duceth  slaughters.  This  last  week  Sir 
Ch.  O'Carroll  (a  good  servant  of  her 
Majesty's)  was  murdered  by  one  of  his 
kinsmen.  Four  of  the  O'Carrolls  are 
in  competition  for  the  lordship  of  that 
country.  Before  this  case  be  decided 
it  will  cost  much  blood  ;  but  therein 
the  State  is  nothing  indemnified,' 

77/i?  Four  Masters  thus  speak  of 
O'Carroll's  death :  '  O'Carroll,  i.e.,  Cal- 
vach,  the  son  of  William  Odhar,  son  of 
Ferganainm,  son  of  Maolruny  was  killed 
in  July  by  some  petty  gentlemen  of  the 
O'Carrolls  and  O'Meaghers.  This 
Calvach  was  a  fierce  and  protecting 
man,  a  strong  arm  against  his  English 
and  Irish  neighbours,  and  a  knight  in 
title  and  honour  by  authority  of  the 
Sovereign.' 

There  was  a  Cian  O'C.  living  at  this 
time,  who  is  savagely  satirized  by 
O'Daly  in  verses  which  begin  thus  : 
'  Cian  O'Caroll  and  his  spouse  are  a 
pair  that  never  forgot  inhospitably.' 
As  O'Daly  seems  to  have  been  em- 


MEATH.  89 

Countrie  hath  bene  often  Spoyled  by  the  Enimie,  and  himself 
much  Solicited  and  partlie  threatned  to  enter  into  Rebellion. 
This  Countie  of  Elie  or  O'Carrells  Countrie  is  bounded  with 
Ossory  and  a  part  of  the  Ouens  Countie  to  the  South,  with 
Ormond  to  the  West  with  Delvyn  Mccoghlan  to  the  North,  and 
with  the  Mountayne  of  Shewblowne  and  a  part  of  Fercall  to  the 
East,  It  hath  Castles  of  some  importance  divers  but  the  chief  is 
Limevadie.5 


MEATH. 

This  Countie  hath  his  name  of  Medium  the  Middle  parta  and 
contayneth  properly  but  one  Shyre  under  the  name  of  Meath, 
being  in  the  beginning  a  portion  appointed  for  the  Kings 
Demeasnes  but  long  since  divided  into  many  barronies  and 
Counties,  and  now  latelie  in  the  tyme  of  King  Henrie  the  8th 
made  Two  Townes  [Counties]  East  Meath  and  West  meath. 
And  because  2  Iryshe  Countries  adjoining  to  these  Shyres  the 
one  belonging  to  the  O'Reillies  and  the  other  to  the  O'Ferralls 
be  nowe  converted  to  Shyre  Grounde  by  the  names  of  the 
Countie  of  Cavan  and  Longforde,  it  is  not  amissb  to  lay  these 


ployed  by  the  English  to  put  calumnies  of  the  Realme,  called  thereof  Media.' 

in  verse,  his  word    could    not  injure  — Campion. 

Cian's  character.  The  Irish  name  is  Midhe.     The  great 

s  Limwaddon. — Dymmok.   'AtBally-  plain  of  Meath  was  called  Mag/i Breagh, 

more    and    O'Carroll's    countrie    the  or  the  Magnificent  Plain ;  it  included 

Queen    hath    under   Captaine    Shane  most  of  the  present  counties  of  Meath 

100  f.,  Capt.  Lister  100  f.,  Sir  Charles  and  Dublin. 

O'Carroll  100  foote.' — Moryson,  p.  43.  b  Keating  says  that  the  ancient  King- 

a  '  A  fifth  plot  defalked  from  every  dom  of  Meath  comprised  the  present 

fourth  part,  lying  together  in  the  heart  counties   of    Meath  and    Westmeath, 

M 


90 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Two  to  East  meath  and  West  meath  and  so  to  contayne  them 
all  four  in  this  middle  province,  albeit  by  some  these  2  last 
Countries  hath  bene  esteemed  part  of  Ulster. 


EAST  MEATH.C 

This  Countie  contayneth  all  the  Land  betweene  Balerotherie 
in  the  Countie  of  Dublin  and  the  river  of  Boyne  near  Drogheda, 
and  then  not  farr  from  Drogheda  extendeth  itself  over  the 
River  and  contayneth  all  the  Land  to  the  Border  of  Cavan  and 
to  the  half  Barone  of  Foore  and  from  thence  in  breadth  to  the 
King's  Countie  and  the  Countie  of  Kildare.  So  hath  it  the  Sea 
to  the  East,  the  Countie  of  Cavan  to  the  West,  Westmeath  and 
the  King's  Countie  to  the  South  and  South  west,  and  the  Countie 
of  Louth  to  the  North.  It  is  in  all  Cesses  and  impositions 
double  rated  to  any  other  Countie. d 


and  parts  of  Dublin,  Kildare,  King's 
County,  Longford,  Brefney  and  Orgial. 
c  '  The  ancient  manuscripts  are  very 
rich  in  topographical  descriptions  of 
this  district,  and  one  of  our  oldest 
coins  is  that  of  Aedh  King  of  Meath. 
In  it  were  four  palaces  of  note  in 
ancient  times — Tara  on  the  Boyne, 
Tailten  on  the  Blackwater,  Tlachta  on 
the  Hill  of  Ward,  and  Uisneach  in 
Westmeath.  In  its  bogs  are  remains 
of  oxen,  which  for  beauty  of  head  and 
horn  might  vie  with  the  finest  modern 
improved  breeds  of  England.  The 
peasantry  are  handsome,  well  made, 
stout  and  healthy.  The  Meathmen 
were  very  Irish  in  the  last  century, 
used  to  boast  that  they  spoke   better 


Irish,  had  more  poets,  minstrels  and 
men  of  genius,  and  had  more  energy 
than  the  boors  of  Leinster,  whom 
they  always  defeated  at  hurling,  box- 
ing, wrestling  and  other  athletic  exer- 
cises.'— Sir  W.  Wilde's  '  Boyne]  pp. 
13,  IS,  16. 

d  In  15 15  it  was  '  ordered  that  every 
village  and  town  in  the  barony  of  Kells, 
that  lay  within  six  miles  of  the  Wylde 
Iryshe,  be  dycheyed,  and  hegeyed 
strongly  about  the  gates,  of  tymbre, 
after  the  manner  of  the  Co.  of  Kildare 
for  dredde  of  fyre  of  their  enymyes.' 

In  1478,  the  Parliament  of  Dro- 
gheda, decreed  at  the  prayer  of  A. 
Tuite  gentleman  —  That,  '  Whereas 
there  is  an  open   road  for  the    Irish 


EAST    MEATH. 


91 


It  hath  Townes 


Drogheda 
Aboy  [Athboy] 
Kelles 
Trim6 


Walled. 


Navan 
Dowlick 


market  Townes/ 


enemies  of  the  King  between  Rath- 
connyll  and  Queylan  to  enter  Meath 
for  the  destruction  thereof,  a  trench  be 
made  a  mile  in  length.'  Again  in  1480 
at  Naas  a  Parliament  decreed — '  That 
it  is  very  necessary  for  the  safeguard 
of  the  King's  subjects  of  his  County  of 
Meath,  that  a  tower  or  pile  of  the 
new  fashion  should  be  built  on  the 
extreme  frontier  of  the  old  march, 
not  only  in  resistance  of  O'Conchie 
[O'Connor]  but  also  for  the  chastise- 
ment of  the  Berminghams.' 

e  In  1584  Draper,  Parson  of  Trim, 
writes  to  Burghley  to  urge  the  erection 
of  a  University  or  at  least  a  grammar 
school  in  Trim.  He  says — '  It  is  in 
a  most  fresh  and  wholesome  ayre,  full 
of  very  fayre  Castles  and  stone  houses, 
and  hath  in  it  five  fair  streets  and  the 
fairest  and  most  stately  Castle  in  Ire- 
land. The  Abbey  and  friary  will  be 
easily  bought  of  the  owner  Edw.  Cu- 
sack  of  Lesmollen  ;  your  suppliant  will 
freely  give  a  Friary  having  stanche 
walls  with  a  pleasant  backside. 

The  country  round  aboute  is  very 
fruitful  of  corn  and  cattle  yeldinge  be- 
sides plentifull  store  of  firewood  and 
turfe — a  very  good   and   sweet  fewel. 


Lastly  the  town  is  in  the  myddest  of 
the  English  Pale  and  well  and  strongly 
walled  about ;  a  thing  that  will  draw 
learned  men  and  be  great  safety  to  the 
whole  company  of  studentes  ;  for  your 
Honor  knoweth  wheresoever  the  Uni- 
versity be  founded,  the  town  must  of 
necessitie  have  a  good  wall,  else  will 
no  learned  men  go  from  hence,  or  any 
other  place  thither,  neither  they  of  the 
country  send  their  sons  to  any  place 
that  is  not  defensible  and  safe  from  the 
invasion  of  the  Irishe.' — Dean  Butler's 
'Trim,'  p.  290. 

fThe  Members  for  Meath  in  1585 
were  R.  Barnwall  of  Crickstown  and 
J.  Netterville  of  Dowth ;  in  16 13  Hus- 
sey,  Baron  of  Galtrim  and  Barnwall  of 
Robertstown.  The  Members  for  Trim 
in  1585  were  Hamon  and  Guyre,  in 
1613  Sir  T.  Ashe,  and  Sir  Roger  Jones; 
the  Members  for  Athboy  in  1585  were 
Browne  and  Ferrell  of  Athboy ;  and 
in  1 6 13  Moore  and  Browne,  gents,  of 
Athboy. 

The  Members  for  Kells  in  1585 — 
Fleming  of  Stevenston,  N.  Daxe,  and 
P.  Plunket  of  Kells;  in  1613  O.  Plun- 
ket  and  G.  Balfe  gents.,  of  Kells. 

Members  for  Navan  in  1585 — Wakely 


92 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


//  hath  many 
Trim,  the  Queries, 
Killynee  [Kyllyne]  the  Lords 

of  it, 
Dunsany  the  Lords  of  it, 
Trivleston     [Trimleston]     the 

Lords  of  it, 
Rathmore, 
Meylaughe, 
Moygare, 
Newcastle, 

Castle-towne  of  Athboy, 
Jesucellin, 
Ardmollan  to  [ 

Bedlowston  to  Sr  To.  Bedlow, 
Stackallan, 
Slane  the  Lords  of  it, 
Moymet  to  Ja.  Dillon, 
Balldungan  to  the  L.  of  Hoth, 
Galtrim  to  the  Baron  of  it, 


Statelie  Castles 
Castle  Jordan  to  Mr-  Gifford8 
Arbracan    to    the    Bishop    of 

Meath, 
Cutmollen, 
Dullerston, 
Gillranston, 
Gormanston    to    the    Viscount 

thereof, 
Colpe, 
Murmudeye, 

Platten  to  Mr-  Darsey  [Darcey], 
Dun  more, 
Beste, 

Castle  lamerby, 
Crinton, 
Moyvally, 
Bective, 
Celcarne, 


The  NoblcmeiP  of      )  The  Lord  Viscount  Gormanstone  his  name 
East-vieath  j       Preston  his  chief  Hous  Gormanston, 


of  Ballyburly  King's  Co.,  and  Waring 
of  Navan  ;  in  16 13  P.  Begg  of  Burrans- 
town  and  J.  Warren  gent.,  of  Navan. 

E  There  are  still  many  old,  ruined 
castles  in  Meath  ;  of  which  we  find  a 
description  in  Sir  W.  Wilde's  Boyne 
and  Blackwatcr,  viz. — The  castles  of 
Carbury,  Kinnafad,  Clonmore,  Grange, 
Carrig-Oris,  Ticroghan,  Trimblestown, 


Trim,  Nangle's  and  Talbot's  castles, 
Scurlogstown,  Trubly,  Assey,  Rivers- 
town,  Athlumney,  Liscarton,  Dexter, 
Dowth,  Proudfootstown,  Naul  and 
Termonfecken. 

''In  the  Barony  of  Dimboyne  are — 
Sir  G.  Fenton  of  Dunboyne,  Pat. 
Phippes  of  Roan,  Jn.  Delahoyde  of 
Bellander,  Rich.  Bremingham  of  Pace, 


EAST    MEATH. 


93 


The  Bishop  of  Meath  his   name  Jones, 

his  chief  Seat  Arbraccan, 
The  Lord  Baron  of  Killyen  his  name 

Plunket  his  chief  Hous  Killyen, 
The  Lord  Baron  of  Dunsany  his  name 

Plunket  his  chief  hous  Dunsany, 


Simon  Rowe  of  Waringstone,  Rich.  Sale 
of  Salestowne,  Alex.  Barn  wall  of  Luston, 
Christ.  Hollywoode  of  Herbertstown. 

Rising  out  of  the  general  Hosting  of 
Barony  of  Dunboyne — Phepo  of  Ro  wen , 
if  he  have  freedom  i  armed  horseman ; 
Francis  de  la  Hide  i  armed  horseman. 

Ratoathc.  —  Sir  Pat.  Barnwall  of 
Crickston,  Baron  Sedgrave  of  Killeglan, 
Barnwall  of  Kilbrue,  Th.  Plunket  of 
Loughgoure,  FitzWilliams  of  Duna- 
inore,  Rich.  Ball  of  Feydorffe,  Jn.  Bir- 
ford  of  Kilrowe,  Js.  Lee  of  Clonresse, 
Pat.  Lee  of  Licianstown,  Jn.  Sparke  of 
Ratowthe,  Gellouse  of  Gelloustown, 
Rich.  Fowleing  of  Parsonstown,  Dela- 
hoyde  of  Dunshaghlin,  'and  many 
freeholders.'  Rich.  Reade  of  Rowes- 
town,  Th.  Russel  of  Cookestown. 

Rising  out  of  Ratoath — Barnwall  of 
Kilbrye  in  person  i  armed  horseman, 
Berford  of  Kilrowe  i  ditto  ;  Ichers  of 
Dunshaughlin  ;  Talbot  of  Robertston 
2  ;  Weafy  of  the  Blackehil  2  armed 
horsemen. 

Serine — Baron  of  Killeen,  Sir  Rob. 
Dillon,  Wil.  Nugent,  Baron  of  Serine  ; 
Pat.  Tankard  of  Castletown,  Pat.  Bri- 
migham  of  Corballies  ;  R.  Caddell  of 
Dowstown  ;  R.  Dillon  of  Serine  ;  Ed. 
Penteny  of  the  Cabbragh ;  Nich.  Cu- 


sake  of  Ballimolchan,  Rob.  Cusake  of 
Geradstown,  Rich.  Cusake  of  Les- 
mollen,  Walter  Porter  of  Kingstown, 
Jn.  Barnwall  of  Mouncktown,  Jn.  Barn- 
wall of  Cookstown,  Mich.  Barnwall  of 
Branstown,  Nich.  Dracot  of  Oder,  Jn. 
Dracot  of  ,  G.  Harvy  of  Serine, 

Wal.  Evers  of  Tarraghe,  Rob.  Pentenie 
of  Jordanstown,  Jn.  Plunket  of  Clonard- 
ran,  Ellen  Plunket  of  Kilcarne. 

Rising  out  of  Skreen — The  Lord  of 
Killeen,  the  L.  of  Dunsany,  and  the 
rest  of  the  Plunketts  24;  Nicholas 
Nugent  in  person  3  ;  M.  Draycott  1  ; 
Sir  T.  Cusack  of  Lismullen  in  consider- 
ation of  his  absence  but  3 ;  Sir  C. 
Cheevers  of  Measton  4  ;  Bath  of  Ra- 
phesk  in  person  3  ;  Kent  of  Daneston 
2  ;  Cusack  of  Gerardston  2  ;  T.  Dillon 
of  Riverston  3  ;  P.  Dillon  1  ;  Tancred 
of  Castleton  1;  The  Portriff  of  Skryne  1. 

Duleeke — L.  of  Gormanstown,  L.  of 
Trimletstown,  Justice  Bath  of  Athcarne, 
Rich.  Caddell  of  the  Naul,  Rob.  Cad- 
dell of  Herbertstown,  Jn.  Dracott  of 
Normanton,  Geo.  Darcy  of  Platten, 
Rob.  Preston  of  Rogerstown,  Talbot 
of  Dardistowne,  Rich.  Bellame  of  Don- 
akernie,  Rich.  Stanley  of  ,  Ed. 

Tallon  'of  the  same,'  Rd  Aylmer  of  Dol- 
lardstown,  Lawr.  Tafe  of  Ardmolchan, 


94 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  Lord  Baron  of  Slane  his  name 
Fleming  his  chief  Hous  Slane, 

The  Lord  Baron  of  Tribleston  his  name 
Barnwall  his  chief  Hous  Tribleston. 


Jn.  Chivers  of  Mastoston,  Chr.  Bath 
of  Rathfeigh,  Js.  Dillon  of  Ballgath,  Jn. 
Cusake  of  Cusingstone,  Wal.  Gowlding 
of  Pierstone,  Pat.  Moore  of  Duleek,  Rd- 
Plunkett  of  the  Boles,  Th.  Kent  of  Dains- 
town,  Th.  Hamling  of  Smithstone,  Pat. 
Whyte  of  Flemington,  the  Corporation 
of  Dowleeke,  Sir  Jn.  Bellew  of  Bellews- 
town,  Sir  Ed.  Moore  ;  Birt  of  Tullock. 

Rising  out — L.  Viscount  Gormanston 
8 ;  Darcy  of  Platten  3  j  Talbot  of 
Dardiston  3  ;  J.  Ayhner  2  ;  Caddell  of 
the  Nail  2 ;  Birt  of  Tullocke  2 ;  Oliver 
Darcy  1  ;  Holde  of  Paynestown  1  ; 
Hambige  of  Smithstown  1  j  Bath  of 
Colpe4i. 

Slane — Baron  of  Slane,  Pat.  Fleming 
of  Gernenstown,  Garret  F.  of  Logh- 
bracan,  Piers  F.  of  Killarie,  Rich.  F. 
of  Rath-Reynolds,  Edw.  F.  of  Loben- 
stone,  Pat.  Barnwall  of  Gernonstown, 
Barnwall  of  Rowthstown,  Walt.  B.  of 
Calcestown,  Rob.  B.  of  Starallan,  New- 
terville  of  Dowth,  Jn.  Bath  of  Cashiel, 
Ivers  of  Bingerstown,  Stookes  of  Mit- 
chellstown,  Lord  Lowth  of  the  Carrick, 
Rob.  Mey  of  Slane,  Geo.  Fitzjones  of 
Slane,  Jn.  Botford  of  Protfortstone. 

Rising  out — Baron  of  Slane  6  ;  Barn- 
wall of  Stackallen  4  archer  horsemen  ; 
Barnwall  of  Roweston  2  armed  horse- 
men ;  Netterville  of  Dowth  2. 

Margallen — Wil.    Fleming    of    Ste- 


phenslone,  Jn.  Newterville  of  Castleton, 
W.  Veldon  of  Raffin,  Pk-  White  of  Clon- 
gell,  Pat.  Beg  of  Fleshillstone,  Wil. 
Garvey  of  Knightstone,  Tallon  of  Wil- 
kenstone,  R.  Plunket  of  the  same,  Th. 
Darcy  of  Donmore,  Th.  Plunket  of 
Possickstone,  Jn.  Darcy  of  Rathoode, 
Jn.  Waffer  of  Kilboy,  Hen.  Rooe  of  the 
same,  Js.  Veldon  of  Rathcon,  Edmund 

of  the  Corballies,  Jn.  Fitzjohn  of 

Plainstone,  Js.  FitzGarret  of  Drake- 
stone. 

Rising  out — T.  Fleming  of  Stephen- 
stone  3  ;  White  of  Clongell  2  ;  Veldon 
of  Clongell  2. 

Navan — Bishop  of  Meath,  Baron  of 
the  Novan,  Js.  Dillon  of  Moymet,  Rob. 
Rochfort  of  Kilbrid,  Alex.  Evers  of 
Rathtain,  Rd  Bellew  of  Bellewestown, 
Jn.  Waffer  of  Gainstown,  Js.  Warren 
of  Philpottstown,  Js.  Hill  of  Aliens- 
town,  Jn.  Eustace  of  Lescartan,  R"1 
Misset  of  the  same,  Geo.  Cusake  of 
Rathallrone,  Chr.  Netterville  of  Black 
Castle,  Steph.  Blackine  for  Cowlneall- 
ven,  Warren  of  Churchtown,  W.  Fitz- 
Garret of  Ongestown,  Pat.  Manning  of 
Hatton,  Rob.  Fleming  of  Rathkenny, 
Th.  Teling  of  Mullagha,  Th.  Bath  of 
Ladin-Rath,  Th.  Ashe  of  Trim,  Rob. 
Hamon  of  the  same,  Js.  Cusake  of 
Tullegharde,  Jasper  Staples  of  Hollan- 
stone,  Chr.  Birt  of  Curghton,  Darcie 


EAST    MEATII. 


95 


Bar  nets  The  Barnet  of  Navan  his  name  Nangle 

his  hous  at  the  Navan, 
The  Barnet  of  Galtrim  his  name  Hussy 

His  Hous  Galtrim, 
The  Barnet  of  Scryne  his  name  Nugent 

his  house  Scryne. 


of  Balreske,  Sir.  Jn.  Dillon  of  Dorames- 
town,  Melcher  Moore  of  Escherowean, 
Th.  Luttrell  of  Tankardstown. 

Rising  out — Bishop  of  Meathe  8  ; 
the  Lord  of  Trimberton  6  ;  the  Baron 
of  Navan  3  ;  the  Baron  of  Dillon  2  ; 
Rochford  of  Kilbride  4 ;  Michael  Cu- 
sack  2  ;  Ivers  of  Racaghe  1  ;  The 
Prortriffe  of  Trim  3  ;  the  Portriffe  of 
Navan  4;  Teeling  of  Mullagha  1  ;  Hill 
of  Allcnstown  1  ;  Misset  of  Laskerton 
1  ;  Eustace  of  Laskerton  1. 

Kelles  —  Barnwall  of  Robertstown, 
Betaghe  of  Moynealty,  Hen.  Mape  of 
Mape-Rath,  Wil.  Betaghe  of  Walters- 
town,  Drake  of  Drakerath,  Wm-  Balf  of 
Ardloman,  Plunket  of  Ardmath,  Plun- 
ket  of  Tath-Rath,  Prountford  of  Mo- 
rentstown,  Th.  Fitzjones  of  Franstone, 
Hen.  Garvey  of  Rossmine,  Sir  Pat. 
Barnwall  of  Killineighnam  and  Mitch- 
more,  Alex.  Plunket  of  Gibston,  Js. 
Erwarde  of  Randallston,  Garret  Plunket 
of  Preston,  Garret  Plunket  of  Irishton, 
Edw.  P.  of  Ball-Rath,  Th.  P.  of 
ThistleKeran,  Plunket  of  Balnegin,  P. 
of  Robinstone,  P.  of  Bolton,  Forde  of 
Fordston,  Nic.  Gillagh  of  Gillston, 
Balf  of  Ballnegin,  Ledwitch  of  Cook- 
stone. 

Rising  out  of  Kells   (or   Kenlis) — 


Alexander  Barnwall  3  ;  Everard  of 
Randalstown  2  ;  Mape  of  Mape-Rath 
1  ;  Drake  of  Rathode  2  ;  Betagh  of 
Moynaltie  for  his  County  6  ;  Ledwiche 
of  Cookstown  6 ;  Fitzjohn  of  Fyans- 
town  1  ;  The  Soffreign  of  Kenlis  2 
archers. 

Dece — Js.  Hussey  of  Galtrim,  Wal. 
H.  of  Moylehussey,  Rob.  H.  of  Ball- 
rodan,  Martin  H.  of  Curmollen,  H. 
of  Muchardroms,  H.  of  Cullendragh, 
Boys  of  Gallgath,  Geo.  Garland  of 
Agher,  Pat.  Barnwall  of  Arolstone, 
Rob.  B.  of  Athshe,  Barnwall  of  Killin- 
essan  and  Athronan  '  cum  multis  aliis' 
Js.  Fleming  of  Derpatrick,  Allen  and 
Wiel  of  Knockmarke,  Hen.  Waring  of 
Waringston,  Rich.  Delahoyde  of  Moy- 
glare,  Baron  Eliot  of  Balreske,  Th. 
Widder  of  Leemaraghstone,  Jn.  Cusake 
of  Troneblie,  Rd-  Crumpe  of  Marshals- 
town,  Jn.  Gilsten  of  Collmollen,  R^ 
Talbot  of  Achar,  Hen.  Usher  Ld-  Pri- 
mate of  Armagh  of  Balstown,  Wal. 
Golding  of  Ballendel. 

Moyfenragh  —  Rd-  Barnwall  of  New- 
castle, Garret  Weslie  of  the  Dengan, 
Pat.  Lince  of  the  Knocke,  Hen.  Dillon 
of  Little  Frefan,  Th.  Lynam  of  Adams- 
town,  Rich.  Misset  of  Bedlowstown, 
Edw.   Kindellane  of  Ballnekill,   Peter 


96 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  chief  Gentlemen 

Plunket  of  Rathmore  Plunket  of  Fathrath 

Plunket  of  Ballioth  Plunket  of  Felten 

Plunket  of  Irishtoune  Plunket  of  Castlekeren 

Plunket  of  Longcrey  Plunket  of  Armaghbeet 

Plunket  of  Roses  Plunket  of  Clonbrene 

Plunket  of  Drombar  Plunket  of  Dromsaurie 

Plunket  of  Gybston  Barnewall  of  Crickston1 


Lynam  of  Frefans,  Wm-  MacEvoy  of 
Balleneskeagh,  Edm.  Keeting  of  Pos- 
sickstown,  Christ.  Leins  of  Crobey, 
Edm.  Darcy  of  Clondaly,  Rd  Gifford  of 
Castle  Jordan,  Sir  Ed.  FitzGerald  of 
Teighcroghan,  Gerald  FitzGerald  of 
Moylagh,  Ed.  Aylmer  of  the  same,  Pat. 
Cusake  of  Clonmaghan,  Hen.  Burnell 
of  Castle  Richard,  Edm.  Darcy  of  Jor- 
danstown,  Hen.  Kinge  of  Ardnemollen, 
Gregory  Cole  of  Clonard. 

Rising  out  of  Dcece  and  Moyfenragh 
— The  Baron  of  Galtrim  in  person  4  ; 
Barnwall  of  Antislon  2  ;  De  la  Hide  of 
Moyglare  2  ;  Westley  of  the  Dengen 
3;  Goodall  2;  B.  Cusacke  1;  Fleming 
of  Dirpatrick  1  ;  Mercler  Hussey  2  ; 
De  la  Hide  of  Assye  1. 

Lune — Rich.  Plunket  of  Rathmore, 
Pat.  Begge  of  Moyagher,  Martin  Blake, 
Js.  Dowdall,  Melchior  Moore  and 
Robert  Misset,  all  of  Athboy ;  Walter 
Scurlocke  of  the  Frame,  Roger  Dillon 
of  Ballenedramey,  Jn.  Rochfort  of  Ker- 
anston,  Rob.  R.  of  Clonekevan,  Wal 
Lince  of  Donowre,  Wal.  Nangle  of 
Kildalkey. 


Rising  out  of  Lune — Lynch  of  Dun- 
more  1  ;  Rochford  of  Keranston  1  ; 
The  Portriff  of  Athboy  4 ;  Bernaby 
Sherlock  2. 

Fowere — Plunket  of  Oldcastle,  P.  of 
Newcaster,  P.  of  Loughcrew,  Chr.  P. 
of  Clonebreny,  P.  of  Ballinacaldde,  P 
of  Thomastowne,  P.  of  Drumsaurie, 
Balf  of  Collmoolestone,  Rob.  Barnwall 
of  Moylaghoo,  Tint  (or  Tuit  ?)  of  Bal- 
traseney,  Js.  Dowdal  of  Athboy  '  for 
Oliver  Plunkett's  lands  in  Ballegray ;' 
Dardisse  of  Gleveckloan. 

Rising  out  of  Foivcr — The  Plunkets, 
24  horsemen;  Balfeof  Galmoweston  2; 
Barnwall  of  Morlow  1  ;  Tuite  of  Bel- 
trastin  1. 

The  names  according  to  baronies  are 
taken  from  Car.  Cal.  '  Perambulation 
of  the  Pale'  in  1596;  the  'Rising  out 
of  Meath'  arc.  1586  is  taken  from  '  the 
Statistical  Survey  of  Meath.' 

1  There  were  30  families  named  Barn- 
wall who  enjoyed  considerable  estates 
in  Meath  and  Dublin.  Sir  Patrick  B. 
of  Crickstown  brought  4  mounted  ar- 
chers to  the  general  hosting  of  Tara  ; 


EAST    MEATH. 


97 


Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Barnewall 
Cusack  of 
Cusack  of 
Cusack  of 
Cusack  of 
Cusack  of 


of  Kilbrew 

of  Moylaghe 

of  Roeston 

of  Gerlonstone 

of  Caufelston 

of  Aronston 

of  Flemingston1 

of  Crackanston 

of  Robertston 

of  Staffordstone 

LismollinJ" 

Cufyngston 

Gerardston 

Rahalion  [Rathlion]k 

Ballunalheu 


Cusack  of  Trubloy1 
Cusack  of  Cloneard 
Cusack  of  Clomochain 
Proteford  of  Protfordston 
Tynt  of  Blayne 
Loynes  of  Cuake 
Caddell  of  the  Nail 
Caddell  of  Harberdston 
Caddie  of  Doweston 
I  vers  of  Ratoryn"1 
Luttrell  of  Tancardston 
Bed^e  of  Frencheston 
Beedsre  of  Harriston 
Whyte  of  Clongell 
Rochforde  of  Kilbride" 


he  m.  a  dau.  of  Sir  P.  Barn  wall  of  Turvey, 
and  had  5  sons  and  3  daughters  ;  his 
son  Richard  was  m.  to  a  dau.  of  Sir 
Oliver  Plunket  of  Rathmore,  an- 
cestor of  Chief  Baron  Palles. 

John  B.  of  Flemington  was  m.  to 
Lord  Howth's  widow;  he  was  a  brother 
of  Sir  P.  Barnwall  of  Turvey  ;  he  made 
his  will  in  this  year  1598. — Lodge. 

'  In  1598  Edward  C.  of  Lismullen 
sold  the  lands  of  the  Augustinian  and 
Dominican  Friars  to  Roger  Jones. 
These  lands  are  still  in  the  possession 
of  the  Lords  Essex  and  De  Ros,  re- 
presentatives of  Archbishop  Jones. 

Catherine  Cusack  of  Cushinstown 
m.  Sir  H.  Colley  of  Castle  Carbery. 

k  On  the  wayside  cross  of  Nevins- 
town  there  is  an  inscription  in  beautiful 
black-letter  character.     What  remains 


of  it  runs  thus  :  .  .  .  .  Armigeri,  et 
Margaretae  Dexter  uxoris  ejus  ac  hcre- 
dum  eorum  qui  hanc  crucem  fecerunt 
anno  Domini  15S8,  quorum  animabus 
propitietur  Deus.     Amen. 

The  armiger  was  found  by  Mr.  J. 
Huband  Smith  to  be  Michael  de  Cu- 
sack, Lord  of  Portrane  and  Rathaldron, 
who  got  with  his  wife  Margaret  Dexter, 
the  castle,  town  and  lands  of  Rathaldron. 

1  On  the  southern  bank  of  the  Boyne 
we  still  find  a  remnant  of  the  castle  of 
Trubly  or  Turberville,  the  ancient  seat 
of  the  Cusacks.  It  consisted  of  a 
square  keep  with  circular  corner  towers. 

m  Walter  Evers  of  Bingerstown  in 
Meath  was  the  cousin  and  executor  of 
Sir  Wm-  Taaffe  who  distinguished  him- 
self fighting  against  O'Neill. — Lodge. 

n  Rob.  R.  of  Kilbryde,  ancestor  of 
N 


9§ 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Veldon  of  Raffinall 
Veldon  of  Raffen 
Newtervile0 
Drake  of  Drakerath 
Porter  of  Kingstone 


Wesley  of  Dingen 
Wal  of  Blackhall 
Bath  of  Rafeia 
Justice  Bathp 
Bath  of  Dewleeke 


Lord  Belfield,  brought  4  archers  on 
horseback  to  the  general  Hosting  at 
Tara  in  1593  for  the  barony  of  Navan 
and  one  for  that  of  Ratoath  ;  he  m.  a 
dau.  of  Chief  Baron  Sir  Lucas  Dillon, 
and  had  6  sons  and  4  daughters.  His 
son  and  heir,  John,  was  23  years  old  in 
159S;  his  sons-in-law  were  Sir  W. 
Dongan  of  Castleton  Kildrought,  and 
Luttrell  of  Tancardstown  in  Meath. — 
Lodge. 

0  John  Netterville  of  Douth  was  M.P. 
for  Meath  in  1585  ;  he  died  in  1601  ; 
his  brother  Richard  N.  of  Corballies 
was  a  distinguished  lawyer,  and  was 
M.P.  for  Dublin  in  1585  ;  his  wife  was 
a  dau.  of  Sir  J.  Gemon  of  Kilmacoole 
in  Louth ;  his  son  Nicholas,  who  was 
18  years  old  in  1598,  was  made  a  Vis- 
count in  1622,  joined  the  Confedera- 
tion of  Kilkenny,  was  outlawed  in  1642, 
and  died  in  1654,  leaving  8  sons,  two 
of  whom  were  Jesuits,  and  four  were 
Confederate  officers.  The  present  Lord 
is  the  8th  Viscount.  Richard  N.  was 
reported  by  Sydney  to  Elizabeth  to  be 
'  as  seditious  a  varlet  and  as  great  an 
impugner  of  English  government  as 
any  this  Lande  beareth.'  He  married 
a  dau.  of  Plunket  of  Dunsoghly  ;  he 
died  in  1607. — Lodge  and  Burkes 
Peerages. 


p  The  inscription  on  the  Wayside 
Cross  of  Athcarne  runs  thus — On  the 
front  of  the  pillar — 

'This  Cross  was  builded  by  Jennet 
Dowdall,  late  wife  unto  William  Bathe 
of  Athcarne,  justice,  for  him  and  for 
herself,  in  the  year  of  our  Lorde  God 
1600,  which  justice  deceased  the  xxv 
of  October  1599,  and  buried  in  the 
church  of  Duleek,  whose  souls  I  praye 
God  take  to  his  Mercie.  Amen. 
I.H.S.' 

On  the  iaek—'Uiule  Marie  full  of 
Grace,  oure  Lord  is  with  the.  Haile 
sweet  virgin  the  blessed  mother  of  God, 
the  excellent  Queen  of  Heaven  praye 
for  us  poore  soules.  Amen.' — See 
Paper  of  J.H.S.  in  Proceedings  of  R.I. 
Academy. 

In  the  village  of  Duleek  stands  a 
remarkable  Wayside  Cross.  The  in- 
scription on  one  side  is — '  This  Cross 
was  builded  by  Genet  Dowdall,  wife 
to  William  Bathe  of  Athcarne,  justice 
of  his  Majesty's  Court  of  Common 
Plees,  for  him  and  her,  anno  1601. 
He  deceased  the  15th  of  Oct.  1599, 
buried  in  the  church  of  Duleek  ;  whose 
souls  I  pray  God  take  to  his  mercie.' 
On  the  other  side  of  the  Cross  are 
sculptured  in  relief  figures  of  S15,  An- 
drew,   Catherine,     Stephen,     Patrick, 


EAST    MEATH. 


99 


Bath  beside  Slane 

Balf  of  Colmoleston 

Balf  of  Fidorth 

Balf  of  the  Cleggs 

Betaghe  of  Monaltie 

Betaghe  of  Dunowie   [Duna- 

more] 
Justice  Dillon  of  Newton 
James  Dillon  of  Moynet9 
Bartholemew  Dillon  ofr  River- 

ston 
Dillon  of  Prowdeston 
Dillon  of  Harbeston 
Warren  of  the  Navan 
Warren  of  Warrenston 


Penteney  of  Cabragh 
Tancard  of  Castletoune 
Tylen  of  Molashe  [Molahae] 
Hussey  of  Adrain 
Hussey  of  Moylaghe 
Delahide  of  Balankey 
Delahide  of  Dunsoghley 
Delahide  of  knockconor 
Nugent  of  Kilcarne 
Elmer  of  Dullerston 
Field  of  Payneston 
Kent  of  Daneston 
Olivers  of  Moreton 
Talbot  of  Robertston 
Talbot  of  Daideston 


Kieran,  Magdalene,  Jacobus,  and 
Thomas. 

The  bridge  of  Duleek  was  erected  in 
15S7  by  \Vm-  Bathe  and  Genet  Dowdall, 
as  appears  from  an  inscribed  tablet  in- 
serted in  the  battlement. — See  Sir  W. 
Wildes  '  Boyne,'  p.  277. 

q  This  Sir  James  D.  of  Moymet  be- 
came Earl  of  Roscommon  in  1622  ;  by 
his  wife,  Miss  Barnwall  of  Turvey,  he 
had  7  sons  and  6  daughters  ;  his  son 
George  was  a  Jesuit  of  great  learning  ; 
his  great  grandson  was  the  poet  Earl 
of  Roscommon. — See  Lodge. 

The  father  of  James  was  Sir  Lucas 
Dillon  ;  he  was  a  distinguished  lawyer, 
and  had  great  experience  in  military 
and  civil  matters ;  he  was  called  by 
Sydney  mens  fidclis  Lucas.  Elizabeth 
conferred  on    him  and  his   heirs   the 


office  of  Seneschal  of  the  Barony  of 
Kilkenny  West  over  the  surname  of 
Dillon  and  other  inhabitants  thereof. 
He  m.  a  dau.  of  Chief  Baron  Bathe  of 
Athcarne  and  Drunconragh,  and  had 
7  sons  and  5  daughters.  He  lies  buried 
under  a  noble  monument  in  Newtown  ; 
it  is  an  altar  tomb,  on  which  are  the 
recumbent  figures  of  Sir  Lucas  and  his 
lady,  and  it  is  adorned  with  the  arms  of 
Dillon,  Bathe,  and  Barnwall. — Lodge, 
and  Sir  W.  Wilde's  '  Boy ne.' 

'  Ancestor  of  Sir  J.  Dillon,  Bart,  of 
Lismullen,  Baron  of  the  Holy  Roman 
Empire.  Bartholomew  was  son  of 
Chief  Justice  Sir  R.  Dillon  and  m.  a 
dau.  of  Sir  W.  Sarsfield  of  Lucan  ;  he 
was  25  years  old  in  1598  and  distin- 
guished himself  against  Tyrone — See 
Lodge. 


IOO 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Talbot  of  Aofher 
Tirrell  of  Johnston 
Beerford  of  Kylbrowe 
Bedlow  of  Bedlowston5 
Sale  of  Saleston 
Hill  of  Allenston 
Phepoe  of  the  Rovan 
Scurlock  of  Kilmarton1 
Lee  of  Clomesse 
Fleming  of  Derpatrick 
Fie.  of  Sedon 

s  Sir  J.  Bellew  owned  the  manors  of 
Bellewstown  and  Duleek,  etc.  He  was 
in  1563  a  Commissioner  for  the  Pre- 
servation of  the  Peace  in  Drogheda 
and  all  Louth  during  the  L.  Deputy's 
Expedition  against  Shan  O'Neill.  In 
1584  he  and  his  wife  Ismay  Nugent 
built  the  bridge  of  Ballycorry  in  West- 
meath  where  an  Inscription  still  remains 
stating  them  to  be  the  founders,  and 
asking  the  Prayers  of  all  who  pass  by. 
He  and  Dame  Ismay  erected  the  East 
window  in  the  Church  of  Duleek  ;  and 
also  a  'Monument  for  their  burial' in 
Duleek  churchyard.  In  1598  he  made 
his  Will,  in  which  he  says  :  '  To  the  in- 
tent that  my  heirs  may  be  and  shall  con- 
tinue dutiful  subjects  to  her  Majesty 
and  her  successors,  Kings  and  Queens 
of  England  and  Ireland,  my  will  is  that 
I  demise  .  . .  said  Manors  ...  to  my  sons 
Christopher,  John,  and  Richard  with 
these  conditions  that  whensoever  and 
as  often  as  the  said  Christopher  etc. 
shall,  or  do  imagine.practice,  compass, 


Fie.  of  Baligatlan 
Fie.  of  Kilrory 
Fie.  of  Stevinston 
Fitz  John  of  Franston 
Dorran  [Derran]  of  Derranston 
Wafer  of  Grunston 
Misset  of  Lascarten 
Eustace  of  the  same 
Clinch  of  the  Scryne 
Arward  of  Randolfeston 
Darcy  of  Dounmow 

assent,  go  about,  conclude,  determine, 
commit,  deal  or  execute  any  treason 
whatsoever,  the  Interest  of  such  person 
and  his  heirs  shall  cease  .  .  .' 

Sir  John's  brother,  Richard  of  Stamen, 
was  M.P.  for  Dundalk  in  1 585 ;  he  died 
in  16 1 6.  Sir  Christopher  B.  of  Bellews- 
town m.  a  dau.  of  Sarsfield  of  Lucan, 
and  died  in  16 10.  He  had  4  sons 
and  2  daughters.  His  heir  was  27 
years  old  in  1598.  His  son  Robert 
owned  Donemore.  James  B.  was 
Mayor  of  Dublin  in  1598. — Lodge. 

'  Barnaby  Scurlock  of  Frayne  in 
Meath  m.  a  dau.  of  Sir  T.  Nugent  of 
Moyrath,  and  died  in  1633,  leaving  4 
sons  and  6  daughters.  Of  this  family 
was  Barnaby  Scurlock,  who  was  re- 
ported to  Elizabeth  by  Sydney  as  having 
'  purchased  more  and  builded  more 
than  ever  his  father  did;  his  chief  mean 
to  get  this  was  by  being  attorney  to 
your  sister  and  yourself.  From  which 
office  he  was  displaced ;  since  which 
time  he  never  ceased  to  impugn  Inglishe 


EAST    MEATII. 


IOI 


Darcy  of  Plattin 
Moore  of  Uskerower 
Moore  of  Mooreston 
Black  of  Athboy 
Tallon  of  Wilkinston 
Gerald  of  the  Rathu 
Map  of  Mapston 
Map  of  Maprath 
Hamlen  of  Smythston 
Cromp  of  Muchalton 
Foord  of  Foordston 


Lynch  of  the  knock 
Eliot  of  Baliesko 
Russell  of  Cookeston 
Telines  of  Telinston 
Dillon  of  Balinderomny 
Cardiff  of  Flemingston 
Ledwich  of  Cookeston 
Bremingham  of  Corbally 
Whyte  of  Flemingston 
Foster  of v 
Usher  of  Balsound 


government,  and  in  especial  your  Ma- 
jesty's Prerogatives.'  Wherefore,  when 
Scurlock  went  to  England,  he  was 
imprisoned  in  the  Fleet. — Lodge. 

The  castle  of  Scurlogstown  was  one 
of  the  strongest  built  watch-towers  of 
the  Pale — its  massive  and  gloomy  walls, 
its  tall  towers  and  unbroken  battle- 
ments give  it  such  a  stern  appearance 
that  in  passing  it  one  still  expects  to 
hear  the  warders  challenge  from  its 
gate.— Sir  W.  Wilde's  '  Boyne.' 

u  Sir  Edw.  FitzGerald  of  Tecroghan 
in  Meath  m.  Miss  Barnwall  of  Turvey ; 
his  son,  Sir  Luke,  m.  a  dau.  of  Viscount 
Netterville.  Sir  Edward  was  a  distin- 
guished man.  The  Jesuit  Father,  Chris- 
topher Holywood,  under  the  now  dc 
plume  of  John  Geraldine,  dedicated  to 
his  cousin  (cognatus),  Sir  Edw.  Fitz- 
Gerald, his  work  De  Meteoris,  pub- 
lished in  1613 — '  Oraatissimo  Viro  D. 
Edwardo  Geraldine  de  Teacrochane, 
Equiti  aurato,  bonorum  ac  literatorum 
patrono  optimo  .  .  .  Cui,quaeso  potiore 


jure  quam  tibi  debetur,  qui  multis  mag- 
nisque  rebus,  non  sine  multorum  admi- 
ratione,  domi  forisque  praeclare  gestis, 
amplissima  virtutis  tuae  testimonia 
exhibuisti,  ita  ut  Familiae  Nostrae 
Geraldinorum,  post  Illustrissimum 
Heroem,  Kildariae  comitem,  fatali 
quodam  nostro  malo  ereptum,  lumen 
et  columen  habearis.' 

v  Gerald  Foster  of  Kilgrage —  Usher 
MSS.  (E.  4, 33).  Prountford  of  Mouns- 
towne. — Car.  Cal.  From  the  Carew 
and  Clongowes  MSS.  we  have  the 
names  of  about  250  gentlemen  of 
Meath.  '  In  Meath  the  son  and  heir 
of  Sir  William  Nugent  was  in  Rebellion, 
and  the  county,  lying  in  the  heart  of 
the  Pale,  was  greatly  wasted  by  the 
Ulster  Rebels,  and  many  Castles  lay 
waste  without  inhabitants;  but  no  Rebels 
possessed  either  town  or  castle  therein. 
At  Kells  and  Navan  Lord  Dunsany 
has  50  horse  and  Sir  G.  Moore  25. 
There  are  1700  f.  under  Lords  Audley 
and  Dunsany,   Sir  F.  Conway  and  Sir 


102 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Harvey  of  Odder 
Prenderfoote  of v 


Dracot  of  Marranston 
Bysse  of 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATH. 

This  Countiea  contayneth  all  land  from  the  red  moore  beyond 
Aboy  to  the  river  of  the  Sheynen  by  delven  McCoghlan  and  in 
bredth  from  the  King's  Countie  to  the  Countie  of  Longford  com- 
prehending all  McGeoghaghans,  McCawles,  and  Omelaughlines 
Countries.  So  hath  it  the  King's  Countie  East  and  South,  the 
Sheynen  and  part  of  the  Countie  of  Longford  West,  and  the 
Countie  of  Cavan  and  part  of  the  Countie  of  Meath  north. b 
Townes  Mollingare  governed  by  a  Portrise,  lately  often 

burned. 
Market  Townes  Fower 

Kilkenny  West 

Athloane 

Ballimore 


Castletoune  Delvin 

Rawyre 

Delvin  (sic) 


C.  S*-  Lawrence,  Sir  H.  Dockora,  Sir 
J.  Chamberlaine,  Syney,  Sydley,  Atkin- 
son, Heath,  Nelson,  and  Hugh  Reilly. 
At  Trim  there  are  50  h.  under  Sir 
Griffin  Markham,  and  400  f.  under  Sir 
C.  Piercy,  Orme,  and  Alford.  At 
Athboy  260  f.  under  Sir  R.  Moryson. 
— Moryson,  p.  43. 

a  Hall  dismisses  this  county  in  half 
a  page,  and  then  says — '  The  limits  of 
our  work  will  not  permit  us  to  describe 
at  length  the  counties  which  have  no 
very  peculiar  feature ;  and  we  avail 
ourselves  of  the  opportunity  presented 


to  us  for  supplying  some  information 
concerning  Irish  music'! 

b  In  543  an  Act  of  Parliament  was 
passed,  in  the  preamble  of  which  we 
read,  '  For  the  division  of  Methe  into 
two  shires,  (because)  the  shire  of  Methe 
is  great  in  circuit,  and  the  west  parte 
thereof  laid  about  and  beset  with 
divers  of  the  Kings  rebells,  and  in 
several  partes  thereof  the  King's  writs 
for  lacke  of  ministration  of  justice, 
have  not  of  late  been  obeyed,  ne  his 
Grace's  lawes  put  in  due  exercise.' — See 
p.  270  of  Grand  Juries  of  Westmealh. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATII. 


io- 


Castles  and      (Killean  the  Lord  of  Delvins  chief  Hous, 
good  Houses      \  Castle  toune  delvin  belonging  to  him  also, 
Rawyre,  belonging  to  the  Earle  of  Kildare, 
Tristinaughe,  a  faire  Abbey  belonging  to  Henrie 

Pierce,0 
Waterston  to  one  of  the  Dillons, 
Tuiteston  to  William  Tuit,  and  many  others 
belonging  to  the  Several  Surnames  of 
Nugentsd  Tyrrellsf 

Darcies6  Daltonsg 


c  Ancestor  of  Sir  E.  F.  Piers,  Bart., 
of  Tristernagh  Abbey.  This  Henry  P. 
married  a  dau.  of  Dr.  Jones,  Protestant 
Archbishop  of  Dublin,  and  had  4  sons 
and  6  daughters  ;  he  was  a  distinguished 
traveller,  and  left  behind  him  an  ac- 
count of  his  travels,  which  was  placed 
among  '  the  Ware  MSS.'  He  became 
a  Catholic,  and  prevailed  on  some  of 
his  children  to  embrace  the  same  faith  ; 
one  of  his  sons  became  a  Franciscan, 
and  a  grandson  became  a  secular  priest. 
H.  Piers  d.  in  1623.  His  father,  Wra- 
P.,  got  1000  marks  for  bringing  in  the 
head  of  Shan  O'Neil,  who  was  mur- 
dered by  the  Scots. — Burkt?s  Peerage. 

d  Barony  of  Delvin.  —  Delvin  the 
chief  town  is  possessed  by  the  L.  of 
Delvin.  His  chief  house  is  called 
Clonin.  Other  towns  are  Dromcree, 
Teghmon,  and  Ballenemonoe  ;  a  great 
sept  of  the  Nugents  inhabit  this 
barony. 

The  half  barony  of  Fowre. — The 
chief  town,  Fowre ;  it  is  inhabited 
by  the  Nugents,  and  the  chief  gentle- 


man is  the  owner  or  heir  of  Corolans- 
town. 

Barony  of  Corkry.  —  Multifernan, 
the  chief  town,  is  inhabited  by  the 
Nugents,  of  whom  the  best  is  Richard 
Nugent  of  Denewear. 

The  barony  of  Moyhassel. — Possessed 
by  the  Nugents  and  Tutes,  '  of  whom 
the  principal  is  Clir.  Nugent  of  Dardes- 
ton,  and  Edw.  Tute,  late  slain  in  Con- 
naught,  of  Killenan.' — Car.  Cal.  p.  192. 

e  Barony  of  Fer billy. — Rath  wire,  the 
chief  towne,  the  Earl  of  Kildare's. 
'  The  Darcies  be  possessioners  there.' 

f  Barony  of  Fcrtullagh. — -Inhabited 
by  the  Tirrells,  of  whom  Sir  John 
Tirrell  is  chief.  His  house  is  called 
the  Pace.  Newcastle  is  held  partly  by 
Rich.  Nugent,  and  partly  by  Will.  Tir- 
rell FitzMorice. 

eBar.  of  Rathconrcd,  called  the  Dal- 
ton's  country. — Chief  town,  Ballymore 
Lough  Swedy,  Francis  Shane's  ;  at 
Dondonnell,  Hen.  Dalton ;  at  Milton, 
the  heirs  of  Rich.  Dalton;  Edm.  Dalton 
of    Mollinmighan ;    Peter   Nangle   of 


io4 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Dillons,11  Omelaghlins,k 

Delamaies,  IVPGeoghaghans,1 

Petits/  Coffies, 

Hop's,  McGawlies,k 

Geraldins,  O  birnes. 

Tuites,j 

It  hath  many  goodlie  Loughes  and  marshes  of  freshe  Water 
of  great  quantities,  whereof  the  greatest  part  fall  into  the 
Sheynan,  above  Athloane  and  the  rest  into  the  River  of 
Brosenaghe  which  also  falleth  into  the  Sheynan  beneath  Ath- 
loane not  farr  from  Melick. 

It  hath  no  noble-men  in  it,  but  onlie  the  Baron  of  Delvin, 
whose  name  is  Nugent,  and  is  under  the  Bishop  of  Meath  as 
Ordinarie  thereof,  whereunto  is  latelie  united  by  Parliament  the 
little  Bushoprick  of  Cloine  McKnoshe  in  Omeloughlines  Countrie. 


Bishopstown  ;  Francis   Shane  of  Kil- 
lare. — Car.  Cal. 

h  Bar.  of  Kilkenny,  called  Maghery- 
Cork  or  Dillon's  country. — Kilkenny- 
the-West,  possessed  by  James  Dillon, 
son  and  heir  to  the  late  Sir  Lucas 
Dillon,  Chief  Baron.  The  inhabitants 
for  the  most  part  are  Dillons.  Captain 
Tibbot  Dillon  dwelleth  at  Killen- 
faghney. 

1  Barony  of  Mag/icry  Demon. — In- 
habited by  the  Petits,  Tutes,  and  some 
of  the  Nugents.  The  chief  of  the 
Petits,  called  Thomas,  at  Irishetowne. 
'  Tutestown,  the  best  Tutes ;  and 
Welchetown,  Edward  Nugent's.' 

■>  Bar.  of  Moyoise. — Chief  inhabitants, 
Tute  of  the  Sunnagh,  Piers  of  Tris- 
cornagh ;  R'1-   Nangle   of    Ballycorky, 


and  Js.  FitzGerald  of  the  Laragh. — 
See  also  notes  (')  and  (d). 

kBar.  of  Clonlonan,  called  O'Molagh- 
lin's  country. — Chief  towns,  Clon- 
lonnan,  Newcastle,  and  Kilgarvan 
possessed  by  the  O'Molaghlins.  Calry 
held  by  Magawle  ;  '  the  chief  is  Balli- 
loghlow.'  The  Karne  held  by  William 
MacGawle,  Brawne-O'Burney  is  an- 
nexed to  Athlaon — Car.  Cal.,  p.  192. 

'  Bar.  of  Moycasscll. — Inhabited  by 
the  Magoghegans  :  Bryan  at  Donewer  ; 
Hugh,  now  sheriff,  at  Castletown  ;  Art 
at  Ballyconin  ;  Con  at  Syonan ;  the 
heir  of  Thomas  at  Larath ;  and  the 
heirs  of  Rosse  Magoghegan,  who  hold 
Killuber,  Moycassell,  Lismoyne,  Knock- 
cosger,  and  the  Abbey  of  Kilbeggan. — ■ 
Perambulation  of  the  Pale  in  1596. — 
Car.  Cal. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATH. 


I05 


Chief  Gent,  in  Nugent  of  Moyrath"1 
Westmeath      Nuo-  of  Carlandston" 


Nug.  of  Dunnore0 


Nug.  of  Dromcreep 
Nug.  of  the  Disarf 
Nug.  of  Colambrer 


m  Sir  Christopher  N.  of  Moyrath  in 
Meath  and  Farrow  in  Westmeath,  was 
son  of  Sir  Thomas  N.  M.P.  for  West- 
meath in  1 56 1  and  of  a  daughter  of  Lord 
Delvinjin  1601  he  married  MissLuttrell 
of  Luttrellstown,  he  died  in  1619  and 
was  buried  in  Taghmon  Church.  His 
son,  Sir  Francis,  became  a  Capuchine 
Friar;  his  son  Sir  Thomas,  born  in 
1598,  became  a  Baronet;  his  great 
grandson,  Colonel  Sir  Thomas  N.  fol- 
lowed James  II.  to  France. — Lodge, 
and  The  Grand  Juries  of  Westmeath. 

"  Edmond  N.  of  Carlanstown  in  West- 
meath, grandson  of  Sir  Thomas  N. 
married  first  a  d.  of  Lord  Killeen  and 
secondly  a  Miss  Cusack.  His  son 
Robert  became  Confederate  governor 
of  Westmeath  in  1642. 

0  Richard  N.  of  Donour  married  in 
1580  a  dau.  of  Sir  C.  Barnwall  of 
Crickstown  and  died  16 16.  On  the 
large  stone  in  the  wall  of  the  Church 
of  Multifernan  is  the  inscription — 

"  Sumptibus  Jaco.  Nugent 
Filii  Rich.  Nug.  de  Don- 
ower,  qui  ob.  18  Feb.  Ao 
Dni  1 61 5.     W.  N.  B.  N." 
Richard's   brother,  Christopher   N.  of 
Clonlost  d.  1613  ;  his  eldest  son  James 
was  25  years  old  in   1598.     The  pre- 
sent Mr-  Nugent  of  Clonlost  was  High 
Sheriff  of  Westmeath  in  1855. 

Sir  Walter  G.  Nugent,  Bart.,  of 
Donore  is  maternally  descended  from 


this  family,  his  ancestor  Piers  Fitz- 
gerald, Esq.,  having  m.  a  sister  of  Sir 
P.  Nugent,  second  Baronet  of  Donore. 
— Grand  Juries  of  Westmeath,  and 
Burke's  Peerage. 

p  Lavalin  N.  of  Drumcree  d.  in  1610, 
leaving  six  sons,  the  eldest  of  whom, 
Nicholas,  was  forty  years  old  and 
married  to  a  Miss  Birmingham  ;  and 
four  daughters,  one  of  whom  was  m. 
to  James  Ledwyche  of  the  Grange  in 
Westmeath.  From  this  family  are  de- 
scended the  Nugents  of  Streamstown. 
— Grand  Juries  of  Westmeath. 

q  Edward  N.  of  Dysert  andTullaghan 
was  Knight  of  the  Shire  for  Westmeath 
with  Edw.  N.  of  Morton  in  1585.  He 
married  a  dau.  of  the  Great  O'Connor 
Offaley,  and  had  two  sons,  Sir  Robert 
and  Andrew,  the  latter  of  whom  was 
18  years  old  in  1598.  From  this 
family  are  descended  maternally  the 
O'Reillys  of  Ballinlough. 

Sir  Robert  was  seated  at  Ballybra- 
nagh  ;  he  had  a  pardon  granted  to 
him  in  1608,  and  dying  in  1620  was 
succeeded  by  his  brother  Andrew,  who 
was  then  44  years  old,  and  m.  to  a 
dau.  of  O'Ferrall  of  Mornin.  On  the 
death  of  John  Nugent,  Governor  of 
Tortola,  the  Nugent  property  passed 
to  his  nephews  Sir  Hugh  O'Reilly  of 
Ballinlough,  and  A.  Savage  of  Porta- 
ferry,  both  of  whom  assumed  the 
name  of  Nugent.     The  family  is  now 

O 


io6 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Nugent  of  Doneames 
Nug.  of  the  Carne5 
Nug.  of  moreton' 
Nug.  of  Balrath 
Nug.  of  Killaughe 
Nug.  of  Ballneaghe 
Nu£.  of  Balliconiell 
Nusf.  of  Castlemollen 

represented  in  the  female  line  by  Lord 
Talbot  of  Malahide,  Sir  C.  Nugent 
of  Ballinlough,  and  Colonel  Nugent 
of  the  Scots  Greys,  owner  of  Porta- 
ferry. 

r  James  N.  of  Coolamber,  brother  of 
the  8th  Lord  Delvin,  d.  in  1603  ;  his 
heir,  Edmund,  then  of  full  age,  died 
that  year  also.  A  member  of  this 
family  became  Count  de  Valdesoto 
and  Major-General  in  the  Imperial 
service,  another  was  murdered  while 
Commandant  of  Prague  in  1720; 
another  was  26  years  in  the  service  of 
Venice,  General  of  its  Troops  in  Dal- 
matia,  Governor  of  Verona,  etc  — 
Lodge. 

"  A  branch  of  the  family  of  Drumcree. 
— Lodge. 

'  Edward  N.  of  Morton  was  Knight 
of  the  shire  for  Westmeath  in  1585. 

■  Edward  N.  of  Bracklyn  d.  in 
1599  ;  his  wife  was  Ismay  Barnwall. 
From  this  N.  was  maternally  descended 
Field  Marshal  N.  of  Austria.  N.  of 
Carlanstown  was  ancestor  of  Earl 
Nugent.  See  in  the  Appendix  an 
account  of  some  religious  of  that  name. 

T  Descended    from    Lord     DArcy, 


Nugf.  of  Newcastle 
Nug.  of  Bracklan" 
Fitzsimons  of  Tallinall 
Golding  of  Archertone 
Frances  Shaen  of  Ballimore 
Whyte  of  Belletston 
Dardrefe  of  Gibbonston 
Darcy  of  Ratlenv 

Viceroy  of  Ireland  in  1324,  whose 
grandson,  Sir  Wm.  D.  of  Flatten, 
carried  Simnel  on  his  shoulders  through 
Dublin,  after  the  coronation  in  Christ 
Church.  Another  descendant  of  Lord 
D.  wrote  The  Decay  of  Ireland. 

The  attainders  of  1642  present  the 
names  of  Nich.  D.  of  Platten,  who  at- 
tended the  great  meeting  at  the  hill  of 
Crofty;  D.  of  Ballymount  co.  Kildare, 
and  D.  of  Athlumney  in  Meath. 
Among  the  attainted  in  1691  were  the 
Darcies  of  Platten,  of  Porterstown, 
and  Corbetstown  co.  Westmeath.  The 
D.  of  Platten  in  1598  was  George  D. 
son  of  Christopher  and  a  dau.  of  Sir  H. 
Draycot.  George's  grand-uncle  settled  at 
Dunmow,  and  on  the  attainder  and 
forfeiture  of  the  D.  of  Platten  in  1696, 
and  on  the  extinction  of  that  line, 
George  D.  of  Dunmow  became  the 
head  of  the  race ;  in  1693  he  was 
declared  an  'innocent  papist;'  he  enter- 
tained as  guests  on  two  successive 
days  Kings  James  and  William  ;  and 
is  said  to  have  pronounced  his  policy 
in  the  lines — 

'  Who  will  be  King  I  do  not  know  ; 
But  I'll  be  D'Arcy  of  Dunmow.' 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATH. 


IO7 


Darcy  of  Clonecollain 
Tuit  of  Killenan 
Tuit  of  Mollenlyethw 
Tuit  of  Sonnaghe" 
Petit  of  Mollingarey 
Sr  John  Tirrell  of  the  Pace 
Tirrell  of  Baloebrack 
Water  moyle  Tirrell  of  Fertul- 
laghe 

Mr.  D'Arcy  of  Hyde  Park,  West- 
meath,  is  the  present  representative  of 
the  D.  of  Platten,  and  Dunmow. — 
Westmeath  Grand  Juries. 

w  Theobald  T.  of  Monilea,  m.  a 
dau.  of  Aylmer  of  Lyons  ;  he  died  in 
1632. 

1  Oliver  T.  of  Sonagh  was  b.  about 
1588,  m.  a  dau.  of  Aylmer  of  Donadea; 
he  was  made  a  Baronet  in  1622.  Sir 
Mark  A.  H.  Tuite  is  the  10th  Baronet. 

Walter  T.  of  Tuitestown,  grandson 
(by  his  mother)  of  Sir  Oliver,  and 
grandson  (by  his  father)  of  T.  of  Moni- 
lea, m.  a  dau.  of  O'More  of  Port  Allen, 
and  had  thirteen  sons,  eleven  of  whom 
fell  in  the  campaign  of  1691. — Lodge, 
Vol.  iii.,  p.  37.  From  this  Walter  was 
descended  the  famous  French  preacher 
Father  Nicholas  Tuite  McCarthy, 
of  the  Society  of  Jesus. 

7  William  P.  styled  Baron  of  Mullin- 
gar;  his  dau.  was  married  to  a  son  of  the 
Lord  of  Drumraney,  and  had  a  son  Ed- 
mund alive  in  161 1. — Lodge,  Vol.  iv., 
p.  170. 

z  There    was    also    Edward    T.    of 


Water  Tirrell  of  Kilbride2 
McGeoghaghan  of  Larra 
McGeog.  of  Robinstown 
McGeog.  of  Moyhassell 
IVPGeog.  of  S.  (sic) 
McGeog.  of  Kiltober 
McGeog.  of  Parres 
Bryan  McGeoghaghan 


Caversto\vn,and  John  T.  of  Clonmoyle. 
Eight  Tyrrels  were  attainted  in  West- 
meath in  1691. 

'  I  could  not  obtain  much  infor- 
mation respecting  this  family.  The 
Tyrrell  property  has  long  since  passed 
to  other  hands,  and  the  name  is  here 
extinct,'  says  the  author  of  Grand 
Juries  of  Westmeath,  p.  317. 

Sir  John  T.  was  'the  chief  of  the 
Tyrrells ;'  there  was  also  William 
Tyrrell  FitzMorrice  of  Newcastle. — 
Car.  Cal.,  p.  192.  Perhaps  he  was 
the  '  Captain  Wiliam  T.  of  the  Irish,' 
who  was  wounded  at  the  battle  of  the 
pass  of  Cashel,  where  part  of  Captain 
Richard  T.'s  men  were  engaged. 
O'Sullevan  mentions  a  Water  T.,  who, 
with  Thomas  Plunket  commanded  580 
men  at  the  battle  of  Rower,  which 
Desmond  and  McCarthy  fought  with 
Essex.  One  of  the  Tyrrells  was  suspected 
of  having  been  bribed  to  let  Essex  pass 
unmolested  through  a  defile.  The 
most  distinguished  of  the  T.'s  was 
'  Captain  Tyrrell ;'  Mountjoy  wrote  to 
Cecil  that,  'next  to  Tyrone  he  was  the 
most     dangerous,     being     the     most 


io8 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


McGeogaghan  of  Castletowne31 


efficient  soldier,  and  of  the  greatest 
reputation  through  all  Ireland,  and 
better  able  to  perform  anything  in  this 
country  than  any  Captain  they  have  ;' 
O'Sullevan  calls  him  a  veteran  soldier, 
well  skilled  in  war ;  the  Four  Masters 
style  him  '  Captain  Tirial  (Risderd  mac 
Tomais  mic  Risdeird).'  See  some  de- 
tails about  him  in  the  Introduction  to 
this  book. 

aa  '  Mag  Eochagain,  Lord  of  Kinalea, 
namely,  Connla,  son  of  Conor,  son  of 
Laighne,  son  of  Connla,  son  of  Hugh, 
died  in  1588;  his  son  Brian,  and  (his 
grandson)  Niall,  the  son  of  Ross,  were 
in  contention  with  each  other  for  the 
Lordshipof  the  territory.'  Niall'sbrother 
was  Captain  Risderd  (son  of  Ross,  son 
of  Conla),  the  gallant  defender  of  Dun- 
boy,  who  was  mortallywounded,andwas 
slain  while  staggering  to  blow  up  the 
beseigers  and  the  beseiged.  O'Sullevan 
says  of  him  '  Dux  Ricardus  M.  vir 
nobilis,  cujus  animi  magnitudo  cum 
generis  claritate  de  principatu  conten- 
debat.'  'So  obstinate  and  resolved  a 
defence  hath  not  been  seene  within  this 
Kingdome,'  says  the  Pacata.  Hib.  p.  3 1 8, 
Ed.  1633. 

At  one  time  the  M.'s  were  chiefs  of 
Kinel  Fiacha  (the  Barony  of  Moy- 
cashel  with  parts  of  Moyashell,  Rath- 
conrath  and  Fertullagh)  ;  they  had 
various  castles,  the  chief  of  which  was 
Castletown  Geoghegan.  In  1328  the 
M.'s  beat  the  English  army,  putting 
3500  of  them  hors  de  combat. 


Elizabeth  directed  a  letter  to  her  De- 
puty, of  which  the  following  extracts  are 
of  interest : — '  Whereas  Conley  Mac 
Geoghegan... humbly  submitted  himself 
. . .  offering  to  surrender  his  estate  for  him 
and  his  sequele...we...are  pleased  to 
accept  himas  our  liege  man  and  faith- 
ful subject...  1 "  he  is  to  deliver  a  full 
and  pleyne  particular  note  and  extent 
of  all  the  manors,  castells,  lordshipps, 
lands,  tenements,  seigniories,  rules, 
rents  duties,  customs,  and  commodities 
whereof  he  is  seized  at  present,'  etc. 
— See  Hardiman's  lar  Connacht. 

Conly  M.  had  by  his  third  wife 
(dau.  of  Lord  Delvin),  Hugh  buid/ie, 
'  the  yellow,'  who  died  in  1622,  leaving 
a  son,  Art  of  Castletown,  from  whom  is 
descended  Mr.  O'Neill  of  Bunowen 
Castle,  whose  father  changed  the  name 
of  Geoghegan  to  that  of  O'Neill. 

In  the  "41  wars,'  three  M.'s  lost 
their  lands  in  Kildare;  Art  M.  lost 
1500  acres  and  Castletown  in  Kinalea. 
In  the  Council  of  the  Confederates, 
Doctor  M.  sat  among  the  spiritual 
peers ;  in  the  Commons  were  Conly 
and  Charles  of  Donore,  Edward  of 
Tyroterim,  and  Richard  of  Moycashel. 
Conly  was  one  of  seven  sons  of  Hugh 
Buy  M.  by  a  dau.  of  W.  Tyrrell  of 
Clonmoyle  ;  by  the  Act  of  Settlement 
he  was  restored  to  his  principal  seat, 
and  to  2000  acres  of  land.  The 
Inquisitions  of  1691  contain  the  Out- 
lawries of  the  Mageoghegans  of  New- 
town, Carrymare,   Lougharlaghnought, 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATH. 


I09 


Bremingham  of  Milton 
Bremingham  of  Balleuirton 
Fitzgerraldbb  of  Am 

Laragh,  Donore,  and  Syonan.  On  the 
magna  panella  in  1703  we  find  in  the 
Barony  of  Moycashel — Edrus  and 
Hugh  Geoghegan  de  Castletown,  Gent. 
Bryan  G.  de  Donore,  Arm.  Carolus  G. 
de  Syonan,  Gent.  Rich.  G.  de  Bally- 
brechey,Gent.  Jac.  G.  de  Killour,  Gent. 
Jac.  G.  de  BallydufFe,  Gent. — Grand 
Juries  of  Westmeath. 

Sir  R.  Nagle,  Bart,  of  Westmeath  in- 
herited the  property  of  the  last  chief 
of  the  Mageoghagans,  from  whom  he 
was  maternally  descended  ;  and  had  in 
his  possession  a  compact  written  in 
Irish  on  parchment,  and  made  by  M. 
chief  of  Kinalea,  and  The  Fox  chief  of 
Muinterhagan  ;  it  is  dated  20th  Aug. 
1526,  and  by  it  M.  was  to  be  Lord 
over  The  Fox.  It  is  is  printed  in  Vol. 
i.  of  /;-.  Arch.  Miscel. 

bb  There  were  sixty  FitzGeralds  at- 
tainted in  1642;  in  Meath  there  were 
six,  including  F.  of  Tecroghan  and  F. 
of  Rathrone.  James  C.  Fitzgerald 
Kenny,  Esq.,  of  Kilclogher,  co.  of  Gal- 
way,  is  the  representative  and  heir 
general  of  the  F.  of  Tecroghan  and 
Rathrone.  In  1691  seventeen  F. 
were  attainted  in  Westmeath.  F.  of 
Larah  fought  at  the  Boyne;  after  that 
he  went  to  France.  A  dau.  of  F.  of 
Pierstown  (by  his  wife  nee  Miss  F.  of 
Laragh)  m.  Dillon  of  Streamstown 
and  Killinynen,  in  the  territories 
of  Dalton  and  Mageoghegan — Dillon 


Fitzgerrald  of 
Dillon  of  A.cc 


d.  in  1640. —  Westmeath  Grand  Juries, 
and  Lodge,  Vol.  iv.,  159. 

cc  Edmund  D.  of  the  castle  of 
Ardnegragh  m.  a  dau.  of  O'Farrell, 
Lord  of  Callow,  and  had  several  sons, 
who  were  distinguished  in  the  Army, 
Church,  and  State ;  his  brother,  Garret 
D.  of  Portlick  Castle,  was  Captain  of 
an  independent  company ;  his  third 
brother  was  Sir  Tibbot,  who  became 
First  Viscount  Dillon,  of  Castello  Gal- 
len.  Tibbot  commanded  an  indepen- 
dent troop ;  he  was  knighted  on  the 
field  in  1559,  he  mar.  a  dau.  of  Sir  E. 
Tuite  of  Tuitestown,  and  had  8  sons 
and  1 1  daughters,  ;  his  4"1  son,  Thomas, 
was  born  in  the  Tower  of  London; 
the  5th  and  6th  became  Franciscans  ; 
his  8th  and  9th  daughters  became  nuns  of 
S1.  Clare  and  established  a  convent  in 
Gal  way.  Sir  Tibbot  died  in  1624  at 
so  advanced  an  age  that  at  one  time  he 
saw  assembled  in  his  house  of  Killen- 
faghey  above  a  hundred  of  his  de- 
scendants. From  him  were  descended 
the  famous  D.'s,  of  the  Irish  Brigade, 
'  tiom  c'elebre  dans  les  troupes  Irelan- 
daises,'  says  Voltaire;  and  Dillon,  Arch- 
bishop of  Narbonne  and  'Primate  of 
the  Gaules.' — See  Lodge,  Vol.  iv. 
Colonel  H.  Dillon  was  M.P.  for  West- 
meath in  1689,  an(l  had  15  officers 
named  Dillon  in  his  regiment. 

Gerald  D.    Lord   of  Drumrany,  by 
his  wife,  a  dau.  O'Conor  Faly,  had  a 


I  IO 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Dillon  of  Waterston 
Dillon  of  Canerston 
Dalton  of  Milton 
Dalton  of  Dundanelldd 
Dalt.  of  Mullee 
Dalton  of 
Hubert  Dalton 
Edmond  Dalton 

son  James,  a  priest ;  a  dau.  Bridget  a 
nun  ;  and  a  second  son  Thomas,  who 
married  the  sister  of  the  Ist  Viscount 
Dillon,  and  whose  eldest  son  became  a 
friar,  and  whose  second  son,  Gerald, 
succeeded  as  Lord  of  Drumrany. 

John  D.  of  Low  Baskin,  grandson 
of  Dillon  of  Drumrany,  married  adau.  of 
Sir  John  Hugan  of  co.  of  Kilkenny, 
Knt.  and  had  two  dau.  and  nine 
sons ;  his  dau.  Jane  m.  Dalton  of 
Dalystown  who  died  in  1636;  three  of 
his  sons  became  priests. — Lodge,  p. 
152-168. 

dd  In  1636  died  John  Dalton  of 
Dundonell,  son  and  heir  of  Hubert  D. 
He  was  the  great  great  grandfather  of 
D' Alton,  who  published  King  James' 
Army  List,  and  other  works,  and  who 
had  some  of  the  ancestral  property. 
The  attainders  of  169 1  include  17 
Daltons  of  Westmeath.  This  family 
has  given  some  distinguished  officers 
to  the  continental  armies. — See  King 
James''  Army  List,  p.  376. 

ee  Of  Mollinmighan. — See  note  (e) 

"  The  Delamares  had  very  exten- 
sive property  before  1641.  Peter  D. 
served    as    Sheriff  of    Westmeath    in 


Delamaire'*  of  the  Street 
Ledwich  of  Ballinelockgg 
Nangle  of  Ballinecorbyhh 
Nangle  of  Bishopstowne 
Water  Nangle 
Walshe  of  Collanhroe 
Evrell  [Uriell]  of  Ballvomen 
McGawlie" 

1773;  he  died  without  issue  in  1805. 
He  possessed  the  estates  of  Killeen, 
Knightswood,  and  Rathlavanagh. — 
Westmeath  Grand  Juries. 

Theobald  and  William  D.  were  among 
the  Catholic  gentlemen  of  Westmeath 
who  signed  a  petition  to  the  King  in 
1605.  About  1407  Baron  D.  of  Dela- 
mare's  country  married  a  dau.  of  the 
Lord  of  Drumrany. 

KB  Ledwich  of  Ballinalack  was  at- 
tained in  1 69 1,  and  so  was  L.  of 
Knockmory ;  the  L.  were  benefactors 
to  the  Abbey  of  Tristernagh. 

hh  Bally  corky— Car.  Cat.  The  At- 
tainders of  1 69 1  comprise  the  Nangles 
of  Kildalky,  Harberston,  Navan, 
Mayne,  and  Kilmihill. 

a  Of  Balliloghlow—  Car.  Cal.  Bally- 
loughloe  was  for  centuries  the  chief 
seat  of  Magawley,  Chief  of  Calry. 
One  vault  of  his  castle  still  remains. 
The  late  Count  Magawley  of  Frank- 
ford,  King's  Co.  was  the  last  of  this 
family  that  lived  in  Ireland. — Notes  to 
Lrish  Topogr.  Poems,  p.  xi. 

The  Emperor  Charles  VI.  conferred 
upon  Field  Marshal  Magawly,  who 
married    Margaret   d'Este   of  Austria 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WESTMEATH. 


I  I  I 


Wm-  more  McGa\vlie 
Obirnekk 

Edmond  O'Brenan11 
Edmond  O'Byrne 
Dionise  O'Byrne 
Moore  of  Rosemeane 
Phypo  of  Huskinston 
Adams  of  Fower 

the  dignity  of  Count  of  the  Holy- 
Roman  Empire,  and  the  rank  and 
privileges  of  a  grandee  of  Spain.  The 
direct  male  representative  of  this  family 
is  Count  Magawly-Cerati,  whose 
grandfather  was  regent  of  the  Duchies 
of  Parma,  Placentia,  and  Guastalla 
tire.  1812. — Burke's  Peerage. 

"  O'Breen  (dBraoin)  was  chief  of 
the  territory  of  Brawney,  which  is  now 
a  barony;  he  lived  at  the  castle  of 
Creeve,  in  the  barony  of  Clonlonan. — 
See  Jr.  Arch.  Miscel.  Vol.  i.,  p.  195. 

1  The  names  of  the  Westmeath 
Catholic  Gentlemen  annexed  to  the 
Petition  of  1605  were:  Edw.  Brenaent ; 
Wil.  and  Rob.  Moore;  Richard,  Lar- 
kin,  Edward,  Nich.,  Walter,  Christ, 
and  Rob.  Nugent ;  Theobald  Dillon  ; 
J.  Terrell;  W.  Browne  ;  J.  FitzGerald  ; 
Garret  Fay ;  Edw.  and  Piers  Ledwich  ; 
Th.  Petit;  D.  Kyrane;  Thomas  and  J. 
Dalton  ;  Wil.  and  Theobald  Delamare; 
Piers  Nangle  and  R.Golding. — Car.Cal. 

It  is  surprising  that  we  do  not  find 
the  names  of  Dease  and  Malone.  In 
'  Cusack's  Book'  written  in  151 1, 
there  is  in  the  'Baronia  de  Fower' 
Richard  Dees  of  Turbitstown  ;  in  the 


Casies  of  Fower 

Dungan  of  Fower 

Freines 

Hamons  of  Mollingare 

Hacklee  of  Killallon 

Porter  of  Porterston 

Russell  of  Russellston™1 


magna  pattella  of  1703  is  found  Jacobs 
Dease  de  Turbottstowne,  Gent.  Malone 
of  Ballynahown  married  a  dau.  of  Dal- 
ton of  Milltown  ;  his  son  Edmund  m.  a 
daughter  of  Coghlan,  Esq.  in  1599; 
they  were  ancestors  of  Anthony  Malone, 
a  distinguished  lawyer,  and  of  Lord 
Sunderlin. — Lodge,  Vol.  vii.,  p.  282. 

The  Malones  were  located  in  the 
barony  of  Brawney  and  Clonlonan,  and 
eight  of  them  are  mentioned  by  the 
Four  Masters  as  Abbots  or  Bishops  of 
Clonmacnoise. 

mm  There  was  a  Patrick  Fox  of  Moy 
vore  in  Westmeath,  who  had  three 
sons,  Nathaniel,  Teig,  and  Garrett;  he 
d.  in  16 18.  Nathaniel  was  Knighted, 
and  got  the  lands  and  Castle  of  Rath- 
reagh,  in  Longford.  A  monument 
erected  to  him  in  the  church  near  his 
Castle,  bears  the  inscription  :  '  Hie 
Jacet  Nathaniel  Fox  de  Rathreogh, 
Armiger,  Hujus  templi  fundator ; 
imago,  filius  et  haeres  Patricii  Fox  de 
Moyuor  in  comitatu  Westmediae,  Mili- 
tis,  qui  uxorem  habuit  Elizabetham 
filiam  Walteri  Hussy  de  Moyhussy 
Armigeri;  ex  ea  genuit  8  filios  et  5 
filias,  e  quibus  8  filii  et  tres  filiae  super- 


I  12 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Of  this  Countie  all  the  Omelaughlines,nn  all  the  McGeogha- 
ghans  saving  Two  or  three  many  of  the  Tirrells  and  McGawlies 
and  some  of  the  Nugents  are  entered  into  Rebellion,  they  will 
not  all  make  above  400  Men,  their  chief  head  in  any  enterprise 
is  Capten  Tyrrell,  otherwise  everie  Companie  is  lead  by  the 
chief  of  their  own  Nation.  They  wast  all  the  Counties  of  West- 
meath,  King's  Countie  and  Kildare,  and  Stop  up  the  way 
betwixt  Dublin  and  Conaught,  which  in  tyme  will  prove  the 
Loss  of  the  province  of  Conaught. 

O'Melaghlin  was    King  of  Ireland, 


stites  sunt;  Patricius  praedicti  Nath. 
Alius  et  haeres,  uxorem  habet  Barba- 
ram,  filiam  Nobilissimi  Domini  Patricii 
Plunket,  Baron  de  Dunsany;  Idem 
Nath.  et  Elizabetha  in  sancto  conjugii 
statu  25  an.  vixerunt,  et  obiit  apud 
Rathreogh  2  Februarii,  an.  1634  aet. 
suae  46.' 

His  descendant  is  R.  Fox,  Esq.,  of 
Foxhall  in  Longford. — See  Westmeath 
G.  Juries. 

nn  The  O'Molaughlines. — See  note 
(k)  p.  104.  In  Westmeath,  lying  for 
the  most  part  waste,  the  O'Molaughlines 
and  the  Magoghegines,  many  of  the 
Nugents,  and  some  Geraldines,  make 
140  f.  and  20  h;  Capten  Tyrrell  200 
men,  of  whom  20  are  horse.  It  is  in- 
habited by  many  great  Septs,  as  the 
O'Maddens,  the  Magoghegans,  O'Mo- 
laghlens  and  MacCoghlans,  which 
seeme  such  barbarous  names. — Car. 
CaL;  and  Moryson.  Part  III.  p.  158, 
Part  II.  p.  31. 


but  was  deposed  by  Brien  Boroimhe ; 
the  O'Melaghlins  were  one  of  the  five 
septs  who  had  the  privilege  of  using 
the  English  lawes.  In  the  time  of 
James  I.  the  lands  of  O'M.  were  given 
to  Clanricarde  and  Blundell.  In  Dil- 
lon's Infantry,  in  the  time  of  James  II. 
there  was  a  Lieutenant  O'M.  The 
Four  Masters  record  the  names  and 
deeds  of  one  hundred  of  this  royal 
family.  The  last  entries  are — 'Nial,  son 
of  Phelim  O'M.'  tanist  of  Clan  Colman, 
a  prosperous  and  warlike  man,  and  the 
best  man  of  his  age  belonging  to  his 
tribe,  was  (in  1553)  slain  by  O'M.' 
In  1557  'the  castle  of  Rachra  was  de- 
molished by  O'M.;  after  which  war 
broke  out  between  McCoghlan  and 
O'M.' 

There  were  750  f.  at  Mullingar  under 
L.  Delvin,  Dillon,  Mynne,  Stafford, 
Lionel  Ghest,  Winsor  and  Cooche. 


COUNTIE  OF  LONGFORD.  II3 

THE  COUNTIE  OF  LONGFORD. 

This  Countie  is  a  large  quantitie  of  Land  possessed  by 
a  people  called  the  O'Ferralls,3  and  was  in  former  tymes 
devided  into  2,  the  Strongest  of  that  Surname,  the  one  which 
possessed  the  South  part  thereof,  call  Offerrall  Bwy,  or  yallew 
O'Ferrall,  the  other  Offerrall  bane  or  Whyte  Offerrall ;  which 
Two  Surnames  and  Capitencies  conjoined  do  make  up  this 
Countie.  It  hath  the  River  of  Sheynen  and  part  of  the  Countie 
of  Leitrim  to  the  West,  the  Countie  of  Westmeath  to  the  East 
and  South,  and  the  Countie  of  Dublin  to  the  North.  There  is 
no  Freeholders  in  it  but  the  race  of  the  O'Ferralls,  saving  of 
late  one  of  the  Nugents  and  one  of  the  Nangles,  and  of  the 
Dillons  and  Frances  Shaen  have_/ra;  [Fee]  farms  and  Leases  of 
religious  lands. 

They  yeald  to  the  Ouene    for  all  ceasses  ^200  by  year 
which  was  given  to  Sr  Nic.  malbee  and  his  heyres  males. 

a  '  Longford,  seu  Anale,  a  numerosa  O'F.  Bane  was  Lord  of  Lower  Annaly; 

gente  o'Pharoll  colitur,  e  qua  sunt  duo  the     Clan     Muircheartaigh     O'F.    of 

dynastae ;     alter    ad    austrum    dictus  Annaly ;  Clan  Alave  O'F.  of  Moydow 

o'Pharoll    Boy,  i.e.,  Flavus;    alter   ad  near  Sliev  Goudry,  the  place  of  Inaugu- 

septentriones,  o'Pharoll  Ban, i.e., Candi-  ration  of  the   O'F.;    the  Clan  Hugh 

dus.    Angli  autem  inter  illos  admodum  O'F.  chiefs  of  Killoe.- — Cronellfs  Irish 

pauci,    et    illi  jampridem   ingressi.' —  Families. 

Letterpress  prefixed  to  Jansoris  Map         Tn  1615—17,904  acres  were  allotted 

of  Connavght,  published  in  1610.  to  strangers,  13,000  to  members  of  the 

When  William   O'F.  died  in   1445,  O'F.  families,  and  the  rest,  in  parcels, 

one  chief,  Rosse,  was  supported  by  the  to  old  inhabitants.     In  1641  the  whole 

Clan  Murtogh,  and  Donal  was  put  for-  county,  with  the  exception  of  the  Castle 

ward   by  the    Clan    Hugh,    and   Clan  of  Longford,  and  Castle  Forbes,  was 

Shane;  after  much  bloodshed  Annaly  seized  by  the  O'F.;  but  at  the  close  of 

was  divided  between  the    two   rivals.  that  war  it  was  nearly  confiscated  and 

About  the  middle  of  the  16th  century  distributed  among  new  proprietors. — 

there    were   five   branches— The  O'F.  Parliamentary  Gazetteer  of  Ireland,  in 

Buidhe  was  Lord  of  Upper  Annaly;  the  the  Article  on  Longford. 

P 


ii4 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Chief 

Gentlemen. 


Castles  in  this  Countie? 

Longford  belonging  to  the  Quene. 

Granard  belonging  to  Sr  Frances  Shaen. 
(  Offarrell  Bwy.d 


I  Offarrell  bane.e 
(  Fergus  Offarell/ 
Uriall  Offarrell,  | 
The  B.  of  Ardagh,     Rorie  Offarrell,  j 

Terg  Offerrall. 


Sonnes  to 
Bwy. 


O'Farrell 


b  The  principal  old  castles  which 
remain,  either  in  whole  or  in  part,  are 
Granard,  Tenalick,  Castle-Cor,  Rath- 
cline,  and  Ballymahon. — Imperial  Gaz. 
of  Ireland.  O' Donovan,  in  his  Letters 
on  the  Antiquities  of  Longford,  mentions 
the  castles  of  Mornin,  Ardandra,  Cam- 
magh,  Castlereagh,  Moat  Farrell,  Bawn, 
and  Ballinclare.—  MSS.  R.  J.  Aca- 
demy. 

c  He  was  Knighted  in  1602  ;  he  was  a 
member  of  the  sept  of  Clan-Shane 
O'Farrell ;  he  obtained  considerable 
grants  of  land  from  the  Crown,  and 
successfully  exposed  great  corruption 
in  the  Surveyors',  Escheators',  and 
Patent  Offices  in  Dublin.  He  was  M. P. 
for  Gahvay  in  1605. — O 'Donovan 's 
Preface  to  Tribes  of  Ireland,  p.  25. 

d  The  representatives  for  Longford  in 
1585  were  William  O'F.  Bane,  and 
Fachtna  O'F.  Boy. 

e  O'F.  of  Ballintober,  son  of  O'F. 
Bane,  was  married  to  a  dau.  of  the 
ad  Viscount  Mountgarrett. — Lodge. 

'  In  1599  Fergus  O'F.  died,  and  his 
death  was  the  cause  of  lamentations  in 
his  own  territory.- — Four  Masters. 


The  3rd  L.  of  Upper  Ossory,  who 
succeeded  to  the  title  in  1581,  had  a 
son,  Geffry  of  Ballyrahin,  who  married 
a  dau.  of  Fergus  O'F.  of  Tenelick. — 
Lodge. 

A  letter  of  Gerald  Byrne  to  Sir  J. 
Perrott  in  1590,  gives  us  a  vivid  picture 
of  these  old  times,  and  of  the  son  of 
Fergus  O'F.  He  says — '  Whereas  you 
asked  me  whether  Fergus  O'Ferral's  son 
hath  been  with  that  traitor  Feagh 
M'Hughe,  it  may  please  you  to  under- 
stand that,  I  being  from  home,  the 
said  Fergus  his  son  came  to  my  house 
in  harvest  last,  and  not  finding  me 
there  went  away  and  staid  baiting  his 
horses  in  my  way  as  I  should  return 
homewards.  When  I  saw  the  com- 
pany of  horsemen  I  made  toward  them 
to  see  what  they  were,  and  I  found 
him  and  another  horseman  well  fur- 
nished with  horse  and  armour,  and  a 
harper  riding  upon  a  hacney  with 
them ;  and  asking  whence  they  came 
and  whither  they  wolde,  they  said  they 
came  from  my  howse,  and  wolde  that 
night  lie  at  Morgh  M'Edmond's  howse, 
a  neighbour  of  mine,  whose  daughter 


COUNTIE  OF  LONGFORD. 


115 


Rosse  Offerrall,8  Sone  andheyre  to  Offer- 
rail  bane,  now  in  rebellion,  and  Usur- 
peth    the    Captenship    of  the    whole 
Countrie  by  Tirons  help. 
Henrie  Malbie's  Sone. 
Sir  Frances  Shaen. 
Of  this  Countie  some  have  followed  Rosse   Offerrall  into 
Rebellion,  his  nomber  is  about  200. 


was  married  to  Feagh  McHugh's  son. 
From  thence  they  would  go  to  Feagh 
McHugh's  howse.  There  they  tarried 
certain  days,  and,  at  their  departure, 
Feagh  gave  Fergus  his  son  a  horse 
which  was  taken  by  Feagh  a  littill  be- 
fore from  Hugh  Duffe  McDonnell,  one 
of  the  L.  of  Ormonde's  tenants  in  a 
prey.' 

From  Russell's  Diary  in  the  Car.  Cal. 
we  find  that  on  the  5th  of  Feb.  1596, 
'Phergus  O'Farrell  sent  in  the  heads  of 
Farrell  O'Banne's  son  and  another 
rebel.'  'June  20  the  Lord  of  Delvine 
sent  in  one  of  the  O'F.  a  notable  rebel, 
who  was  taken  and  wounded  by  the 
Nugents — he  died  of  his  wounds.' 

'  Sept.  6th  the  L.  of  Delvin  sent  in 
three  of  the  O'Farrells'  heads.' 

K  Ross  O'F.  of  Mornin,  Chief  of  his 
name,  married  a  dau.  of  the  Ist  Earl  of 
Roscommon. — Lodge. 

In  1599  all  the  O'Ferrals  were  in  re- 
bellion, except  two  chief  men  of  that 
Family,  and  the  Castle  of  Longford  was 
held  by  an  English  Warde,  and  the 
Rebels  were  in  number  120  foot. — 
Moryson. 

'In    1595  O'Donnell  marched  into 


Longford  or  the  two  Annalys  (the 
countries  of  the  two  O'F.)  though  the 
English  had  some  time  before  obtained 
sway  over  them,  and  one  of  the 
English,  Browne  by  name,  was  then 
dwelling  in  the  chief  house  of  O'F. 
The  troops  of  O'Donnell  set  every  place 
in  a  blaze,  and  wrapped  it  in  a  black 
heavy  cloud  of  smoke.  They  took  the 
Castle  of  Longford,  saved  Brown  and 
his  brother-in-law  and  their  wives  by  a 
rope  ;  but  fifteen  men  of  that  country, 
hostages  whom  Brown  held,  could  not 
be  saved.  Three  other  castles  were 
also  taken  by  O'Donnell,  and  on  these 
occasions  many  were  slain,  of  whom 
one  of  the  freeborn,  Hubert  O'F.,  who 
was  accidentally  slain  by  Maguire. 

'In  1597  an  army  was  led  by 
Maguire  at  the  instance  of  the  O'Far- 
rells to  Mullingar,  and  they  preyed  the 
country  around  them,  pillaged  Mullin- 
gar, and  set  the  town  in  a  dark  red 
blaze.  In  1598  O'Ruairc  at  the  in- 
stance of  Ross  O'F.  Bane,  proceeded 
with  his  forces  into  Meath,  and  plun- 
dered Mullingar,  and  the  country  from 
Mullingar  to  Ballymore  Lough  Sewdy.' 
— Four  Masters. 


n6 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 


This  Countie  hath  never  a  Towne  but  Longford,  which  is 
onlie  a  market  Towne.h 


h  O'F.,  a  Dominican,  was  made  Bp. 
of  Clonfert  by  Pope  Sixtus  V.  in  1587, 
he  died  in  1602.  O'F.,  a  Franciscan, 
was  put  to  death  in  1588. 

In  1689  Roger  and  Robert  O'F. 
were  Members  for  Longford,  and 
Roger  O'F.  was  M.P.  for  Lanesborough. 
Richard  O'F.  was  a  distinguished  Com- 
mander under  Owen  Roe,  and  Col. 
Sir  Connell  F.  of  Tirlicken,  and 
Charles  and  Francis  F.  of  Mornin 
were  in  the  Army  of  James  II.  Eight 
of  the  Sept  were  attainted  in  Longford  ■ 
in  1691.  In  the  year  1703  Marl- 
borough wrote  to  the  Duke  of  Ormond  : 
'  I  give  your  Grace  this  trouble  at  the 
request  of  my  old  acquaintance  Briga- 
dier Offarel.'  A  daughter  of  this  Gene- 
ral O'F.  married  the  first  Earl  of 
Effingham. 

When  O'Donovan,  wrote  his  Letters 


on  the  Antiquities  of  Longford,  Connell 
O'Farrell  of  Camlisk  was  the  recog- 
nised senior  of  the  O'Farrells,  and 
retained  fifty  acres  (free  of  rent)  of  the 
original  territory.  The  chief  repre- 
sentative of  the  name,  at  present,  is  the 
Right  Hon.  R.  More  O'Ferrall  of  Balyna 
in  the  Co.  of  Kildare,  who  has  been  a 
Lord  of  the  Treasury,  Secretary  to  the 
Admiralty,  and  Governor  of  Malta. 
He  was  in  1851  Member  for  Longford 
County,  which  is  now  represented  by 
his  nephew,  George  Errington,  Esq.,  and 
by  Major  O'Reilly,  who  is  a  descendant 
of  Edmond,  Chief  of  Breifny  O'Reilly  in 
1598.  His  brother,  John  L.  More 
O'Ferrall,  Esq.,  is  D.L.  for  Longford, 
and  proprietor  of  Lissard,  concerning 
which  historic  spot  consult  O'Donovan's 
Letters  on  the  Antiquities  of  Longford, 
in  the  Royal  Irish  Academy. 


COUNTIE  OF  CAVAN. 


117 


THE   COUNTIE   OF   CAVAN. 

This  Countie  of  Cavana  contayned  all  the  Lands  called  here- 
tofore O'Reillies  Countie  [in  the  original  the  word  seemeth  to 
be  Omelie,  but  In  my  opinionb  should  be  read  O'Reilie,  as 
also  in  the  names  of  the  Chieftains],  which  was  ever  till  Sir 
John  Perot's  tyme  under  one  Capten,  was  then  divided  into 
fowre  Lps.c  and  each  subdivided  into  manie  portions  and  Free- 
holders, and  no  one  of  the  4  principall  depending  upon  ether, 
but  all  immediatelie  upon  the  Quene.d      The  L.  were  Sir  John 

a  In   1579  it  was  stated  that  '  never      Clankoe).       To    Moylmore    mac    an 

Prior,  and  his  brother,  the  barony  of 
Rathnarome.' — Note  in  O'D.'s  Four 
Masters,  p.  1809. 

Sir  W.  Drury  wrote  to  Walsingham 
about  the  O'Reillies — '  In  June  1579, 
when  I  was  staying  at  Sir  Lucas  Dillon's 
howse  seven  miles  from  Kelles,  four 
German  Barons  came,  who  were  visiting 
Ireland,  and  said  that  after  having 
seen  Galway,  Limerick,  and  some  other 
post  towns,  they  would  go  to  Scotland. 
I  lodged  them  at  Trim  in  Laurence 
Hammond's  house,  sending  Patrick 
Barnwall,  gent.,  with  them  as  a  com- 
panion. While  they  and  I  were  at 
service  the  day  after  Whitson  Sunday, 
Orelie  with  his  brother  Philip  and  his 
uncle  Edmond  and  30  horsemen  well 
furnished  cam  (unlooked  for)  to  pre- 
sent to  me  a  submission  in  behalf  of 
himself  and  his  whole  countrie — to 
have  his  people  framed  to  English 
mannors,  his  countrie  made  shere 
ground,  and  subject  to  law  under  her 
Majesty's  writ.  I  thought  it  good  to 
honor  with   the  title  of   Knighthoode. 


writ  was  current  in  O'Reilly's  countrie, 
and  it  was  almost  a  sacrilege  for  any 
Governor  of  Ireland  to  look  into  that 
territory.' — S.  P.,  quoted  by  H.  F. 
Hore. 

b  The  transcriber  is  right  in  this 
marginal  note.  Dymmok  calls  it 
'OReilie's  country,'  and  says  it  'con- 
teyneth  30  miles  in  length  and  30 
in  breadth.' 

c  i.e.  '  Lordships.'     Marginal  note. 

d  In  a  Lambeth  Manuscript  we  read 
that — 'The  Breny,  now  called  the  countie 
of  Cavan,  hath  been  tyme  out  of  minde 
whollie  in  the  jurisdiction  of  him  that 
for  the  tyme  was  O'Reillye,  that  is  to 
say  Lord  of  the  Countrie;  but  when 
the  partition  was  made  by  Sir  H. 
Sidney,  the  baronies  were  then  divided 
among  the  principal  gentlemen  of  the 
O'Reillies— viz.,  to  Sir  John  O'R.  and 
his  heirs  the  baronies  of  Cavan,  Tol- 
laghgarvy,  Tolloconho,  and  Tolloha. 
To  Edmond  O'R.  and  his  heirs  the 
barony  of  Castlerahin.  To  Philip  O'R. 
and  his  heirs  the  bar.  of  Iniskine  (now 


n8 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 5  98. 


Amelie,e  Edmond  Amelie,   Phillip  amelie,  and    Hugh    reaghe 


But  how  straunge  the  view  of  these 
savadges  parsonadges  (most  of  them 
wearing  glibbes  and  armed  in  mail  with 
pesantses  and  skulls  and  riding  upon 
pillions),  seemed  to  or  straungersl  leave 
it  to  yor  wisdom  to  thinke  of.  And  so 
myself  and  the  traine  together  with 
these  strangers  and  Oreighlie  with  his 
company,  being  entertained  with  the 
said  Sir  Lucas,  we  parted.' 

e  Sir  John  Ruadh  O'R.  was  son  of 
the  chieftain  Hugh,  who  died  in  1583  ; 
he  had  two  brothers  Philip  and  Owen, 
and  four  sisters  who  were  mar.  to  Hugh 
MacGuiness,  Conor  Maguire,  Mac 
Ferroll  O'Reilly,  and  Plunket  of  Clon- 
brene.  This  Sir  John,  '  by  order  out 
of  England,  anno  1587,  was  made 
Captain  of  Breny  O'Reilly,  and  his 
uncle  Edmond  was  confirmed  Tanist.' — 
Note  to  Four  Masters,  p.  181 1. 

Shan  was  Knighted  at  the  English 
Court  in  1 5  85  ;  and  then  he  described  the 
extent  and  the  rents  of  the  five  baronies 
of  the  Breny;  he  complained  that  'his 
uncle  Mulmore  Mac  Prior  O'R.  of 
Clonmahon  hath  threatened  Sir  John's 
tenants  of  Dowold-Donall,  and  their 
said  lands  are  waste,  etc.  O'R.,  by 
ancient  custom,  had  always  out  of  the 
five  baronies  xlv  libr.  each,  as  often  as 
he  had  any  cause  to  cesse  the  said 
baronies,  either  for  the  Queen's  rents, 
or  for  any  charge  towards  O'Neil,  or 
other  matter,  which  sometimes  was 
twice  or  thrice  a  yeare,  and  every  time 
xlv  lib.  to  his  own  use  besides  the 
charge   of    the    cesse.       Likewise    all 


manner  of  charges,  that  his  son  or  his 
men  were  put  into  by  reason  of  their 
beinge  in  pledge  or  attending  in  Dublin 
or  elsewhere  for  matter  of  the  said 
O'R.  Item,  all  manner  of  fees,  etc., 
given  to  any  learned  counsell,  solicitor, 
or  agent  for  the  causes  of  the  contry ; 
out  of  every  8  pooles  of  lande  through- 
out the  five  baronies  one  fatt  beeffe  for 
the  spendinge  of  his  house,  one  horse 
for  himselfe,  one  horse  for  his  wife,  one 
horse  for  his  son  and  heir  with  one 
boy  attending  upon  every  horse,  kept 
through  the  whole  five  baronies  yearly. 
Item,  to  cesse  upon  the  Mac  Bradies, 
the  McEnroes,  the  Gones,  and  the 
Jordans,  by  the  space  of  iii  quarters  of 
a  yeare  yearly,  one  foteman  upon  every 
poole,  which  the  said  surnames  had,  to 
keep  his  cattle,  to  reap  and  bynd  his 
come,  to  thrashe,  hedge  and  ditch,  etc., 
for  the  said  O'R.  Item,  the  said  O'R. 
had  upon  the  Bradies,  the  Gones,  the 
McEnroes  and  the  Jordans  out  of 
every  poole  of  land  yearly,  thre  quarters 
of  a  fatt  beeffe,  and  out  of  every  two 
pooles  one  fatt  porke,  and  also  the  ces- 
sing  of  strangers,  their  men  and  horses, 
as  often  as  any  did  come  in  friendship 
to  the  country.  Item,  all  charges  for 
workmen,  stofe,  and  labourers,  and 
victualls  for  the  building  and  maintain- 
ing of  his  Castell  of  the  Cavan ;  the 
duties  of  the  town  of  Cavan  as  rent, 
drink,  etc.,  now  taken  and  not  denied. 
— Sir  John  O'F.'s  Answers  to  queries 
of  the  English  Commissioners  in  1585. 
—  Careu<  MSS. 


COUNTIE  OF  CAVAN. 


119 


Amilie;  but  so  soon  as  Sr  John  died,  Phillip  Amelie/  being  the 
third  (and  Edmond  being  for  Age  impotent),  Usurped  the  Countie 
and  reversed  all  this  division  being  chieflie  sturred  up  thereunto 
by  the  Earle  of  Tyrone,  whom  he  thought  Especiallie  good  to 
draw  into  his  Faction,  because  he  was  a  Man  of  great  courage 
and  of  many  followers,  and  who  might  have  much  annoyed  the 
Earle  of  Tyrone,  if  he  had  continued  his  Loyaltie.  This  Phillip 
being  slaine  by  one  of  Tyrone's  Souldiers  negligentlie,  Sr  Ed- 
mond8 the  old  man  enjoyeth  the  Government  of  the  Countrie, 


f  In  1596  Philip  O'R.  was  nominated 
by  O'Neill  as  O'R.  over  all  Breifne',  but 
he  was  soon  after  accidentally  slain 
by  O'Neill's  people,  and  then  Emann 
son  of  Maelmora,  who  was  senior  to 
the  other  two  Lords,  was  styled  O'R. — 
Four  Masters. 

'In  1 60 1  Emann,  the  son  of  Mael- 
mora, son  of  Sean,  son  of  Cathal,  died 
in  the  month  of  April.  He  was  an 
aged,  grey-headed,  long-memoried  man, 
and  had  been  quick  and  vivacious  in 
his  mind  and  intellect  in  his  youth. 
He  was  buried  in  the  Monastery 
of  S'  Francis  at  Cavan,  and  his 
brother's  son,  namely,  Eoghan,  son  of 
Hugh  Conallagh,  was  elected  in  his 
place. — Four  Masters,  p.  2243. 

This  Emann  was  chief  of  East 
Breifny ;  he  was  a  member  of  the  par- 
liament of  1585.  The  Four  Masters 
record  that  in  1583  'Emann's  brother 
Hugh  died;  he  was  a  man  who  had 
passed  his  time  without  contests,  and 
who  had  preserved  Breifne  from  the  in- 
vasions of  his  English  and  Irish 
enemies  ;  he  was  buried  in  the  monas- 
tery of  Cavan.     The  son  of  this  O'R., 


namely  John  Roe,  then  exerted  himself 
to  acquire  the  chieftainship  of  the 
territory,  through  the  power  of  the 
English,  in  opposition  to  Emann  (his 
uncle)  who  was  senior  according  to 
Irish  usage.  In  consequence  of  this 
the  country  and  lordship  were  divided 
between  the  descendants  of  Maoil- 
mordha.' 

Emann  was  elected  chief  in  1598. 
So  early  as  the  year  1558  Emann  and 
his  brother  Hugh  made  a  covenant  with 
the  English  Government ;  and  again  in 
1567,  when  they  promised  among 
other  things  that  they  would  pursue 
their  brother  Cahier  O'R.,  Owen  O'R., 
and  Thomas  O'R.,  'nunc  rebelles,  et 
eos  ferro  et  flamma  punire.' — Note  to 
Four  Masters,  p.  1804  to  1808,  see 
also  p.  1997. 

From  Emann  descend  the  O'R. 
formerly  of  Heath  House,  Queen's  Co.; 
of  Thomastown  Castle  in  Louth ;  of 
Scarva  in  Antrim ;  and  the  Count  O'R. 
of  Spain;  Miles  W.  O'R.  of  Knock 
Abbey,  is  descended  from  him  by 
father  and  mother.  Seventh  in  descent 
from  Emann  was  Count  0'R.,Generalis- 


120 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


who  is  assisted  by  the  Sone  of  Sr  John  Amelie  who  having  slaine 
one  Mortaghe  oge  Cavanaghe  that  was  upon  protection,  durst 
not  abide  Trial,  but  fled  to  Tyrone  with  whom  he  hath  remained 
ever  since.11  These  Amilies  is  a  strong  and  valiant  clan,  they 
are  able  to  make  400  good  Horsemen  and  some  Footmen.'  The 
chief  Freeholder  under  them  is  one  Mcbrady.  This  Countie  is 
bounded  with  the  Countie  of  Leytrim  to  the  West,  the  Counties 
of  Fermanagh  and  Monaghan  to  the  North,  the  Countie  of 
Eastmeath  to  the  East,  and  Westmeath  to  the  South.      There 


simo  of  His  Catholic  Majesty's  forces, 
Inspector  General  of  infantry,  Grand 
Commander  of  the  Order  of  Calatrava, 
Captain  General  of  Andalusia,  Civil  and 
Military  Governor  of  Cadiz,  etc. 

Emann  married  a  dau.  of  the  Baron 
of  Dunsaney,  and  had  Cahir,  John, 
and  Terence  Neirinn  (from  whom  O'R. 
of  Scarva)  ;  he  married  2,y  a  dau.  of 
Baron  Delvin,  and  had  Myles,  Farrell, 
and  Charles.  His  son  John  married  a 
dau.  of  Sir  James  Butler,  and  had  a 
son  Brian,  who  d.  in  1631,  and  was  the 
father  of  Maelmora,  known  as  '  Myles 
the  Slasher,'  a  distinguished  cavalry 
officer  of  the  war  of  1641. 

Emann  had  also  two  sons,  Turlogh 
Gallda  (or  the  Anglicised)  and  Turlogh- 
an-iarainn  (or  of  the  Iron). 

Owen,  who  succeeded  Emann  as 
chief,  d.  in  1601,  and  was  succeeded 
by  Maelmora,  the  fourth  son  of  Hugh 
Conallagh,and  last  chiefof  East  Breifne, 
who  enjoyed  that  dignity  till  the  Plan- 
tation of  1609;  he  died  in  1635. — 
Note  to  O'D.'s  Four  Masters,  p.  2240. 
h  Maolmora,  another  son  of  Sir  John, 


'a  young  man  of  fine  person  great 
valour  and  ambition,'  mar.  a  niece  of 
the  Earl  of  Ormond,  joined  the  Eng- 
lish, was  received  with  favour  by  Eliza- 
beth, got  a  grant  of  lands  in  Cavan 
under  letters  patent  with  the  promise 
of  an  Earldom.  He  was  commander 
of  horse  in  the  English  service,  and 
was  killed  at  the  battle  of  the  Yellow 
Ford  in  1598  while  covering  the 
retreat  of  the  English. — D'A/ton's 
Army  List,  p.  925. 

'  Moryson  says  this  county  was  in 
Ulster,  and  that  '  the  Orelyes  in  the 
Brennyhad  800  f.  and  100  horse.' 

Dymmok  writes,  'They  are  a  stronge 
nation,  able  to  mafte  of  their  own 
sirname  400  horse ;  they  are  sayd  to 
be  aunciently  descended  from  the  Rid- 
leys  of  England.' — Dimmok,  p.  16. 

This  is  an  honour  to  which  the 
O'Reillies  cannot  pretend,  as  they  are 
'meere  Irishe.'  Their  Celtic  pedigree  is 
well  known.  Before  the  Normans 
came  to  Ireland,  warriors  of  that  name 
were  slain  in  the  years  n  28,  1 157, 
and  1161. 


COUNTIE  OF  CAVAN. 


121 


is  no  Towne  in  it  but  the  Cavank  a  market  Towne  wherein  are 
2  Strong  Castles,  Several  small  Castles,  and  the  Several 
dwellings  of  the  Amelies,  whereof  there  is  none  of  name.1  The 
Bishop  of  Kilmore  is  Ordinarie  both  to  Countie  of  Cavan  and 
Leytrim. 


k  In  1 5  9  5  an  army  was  led  by  Maguire 
and  MacMahon  into  Breifny  0'R.,and 
they  quickly  plundered  that  country,  and 
left  not  a  cabin  in  which  two  or  three 
might  be  sheltered  in  all  Cavan  which 
they  did  not  burn,  except  the  Monastery 
of  Cavan,  in  which  English  soldiers 
were  at  that  time. — Four  Masters, 
p.  1959. 

1  According  to  Pynnars  Survey, 
dated  1618 — 'The  Precinct  of  Clanchie 
was  allotted  to  Scotch  undertakers  ;  it 
contained  6000  acres ;  in  the  Precinct 
of  Castlerahin  3900  to  English,  and 
900  left  to  Shane  MThilip  O'Reilly,  on 
this  he  had  an  Irish  House  surrounded 
by  a  bawn  of  Sodds.  In  the  Precinct 
of  Tullaghgarry  2250  acres  to  English; 
1000  acres  called  Itterry-outra  to  Mul- 
morie  MThilip  O'R.,  he  had  a  strong 
bawn  of  Sodds  with  four  flankers,  and  a 
deep  Moate,  a  good  Irish  house  with- 
in it — he  hath  made  no  estates.  Cap- 
tain Reley  hath  1000  acres  called 
Lisconnor — all  his  tenants  do  Tlough 
by  the  Tail.  Mulmorie  Oge  O'R. 
hath  3000  acres,  and  in  it  an  old 
Castle  now  buik  up.  He  hath  made  no 
estates  to  any  of  his  tenants,  and  they 
do  all  plough  by  the  Tail.      Captain 


Richard  Tirrell  and  his  brother  William 
have  2000  acres  called  Itterrery.  Upon 
this  is  built  a  strong  bawn  of  lime 
and  stone  80  feet  square,  1 2  feet  high, 
with  four  flankers.  He  hath  made  no 
estates.  Maurice  McTelligh  hath  3000 
acres  called  Liscurcron.  Here  is  a 
bawn  of  sodds  and  in  it  a  good  Irish 
House.  In  the  Precinct  of  Loghtee 
12,004  acres  allotted  to  English  under- 
takers. 

'In  the  Precintof  Clonmahown  4500 
acres  to  English;  and  Mulmory  McHugh 
O'R.  hath  2000  acres  called  Commot, 
and  a  strong  house  of  lime  and  stones 
40  f.  long,  20  f.  broad,  three  stories 
high,  and  a  bawn  about  it  of  Sodds. 
He  hath  no  estates.  Philip  McTirlagh 
hath  300  acres  and  an  Irish  House 
and  bawn.  In  Tullaconchie  6000 
acres  to  English.  In  Tullagha  4500 
acres  to  English ;  and  Magauran,  a 
Native,  hath  1000  acres.' 

Dr.  McDermot,  in  a  note  to  the  Four 
Masters,  says  that  'It  is  estimated  that 
there  are  over  20,000  people  named 
O'Reilly  in  the  Co.  of  Cavan.'  I  may 
add  that  there  are  more  priests  of  that 
name  than  of  any  other  Irish  name; 
they  number  about  eighty. 


CONNAUGHT. 


Connaught1  contayneth  all  the  Lands  Circuited  with  the  great 
Ocean  between  the  River  of  Earne  near  Asherow  in  Odonells 
Countrie  and  the  River  of  Sheynen,  where  it  falleth  into  the  Sea 
beneath  Limerick.  It  is  in  manner  ane  Hand,  because  to  the 
North  and  West  it  hath  the  Sea,  To  the  South  and  West  the 
Sheynen,  to  the  North-east  the  Lough  and  Riverb  of  Earne, 
onlie  a  small  piece  between  the  Earne  and  the  Sheynen  leaveth 
in  that  part  not  Circuited.0 


*  'A  Description  of  the  Province  of 
Connaught,' dated  'January,  16 12,' pre- 
served in  British  Museum,  and  published 
in  Vol.  2  7  of  the  Archaeologia,  says — 
'  Connaght,  by  the  antient  division 
amonge  the  Irish  was  accompted  the 
the  fifte  parte  or  Cocge  of  the  Hand  of 
Ireland,  and  was  then  and  is  still  called 
by  the  name  of  Cocge  Connaght,  and 
contynewed  the  name  and  stile  of  a 
Kingdome  in  the  posterity  of  Con  Ked- 
cagh,  one  of  the  three  races  discended 
of  Mylle  Spaynagh  whome  all  the 
Cronicles  of  Ireland  agree  to  be  the 
absolute  conqueror  of  the  whole  island.' 

'  Off  this  Cocge  Conaght,  a  porcon 
now  called  Thomond,  lyinge  towards 
the  Sowth,  to  the  river  of  Shenan, 
whether  by  gift  or  conquest  hath  beene 
a  long  time  possest  by  the  O' Brians, 
beinge  discended  of  another  race  of 
Mylle  Spaynagh,  whoe  at  this  day 
enioye  yt.  The  earle  of  Thomond 
beinge  the  Cheeffe  of  that  name  ;  yett 
it  was  helde  within  the  government  of 
Connaght  till  the   beginninge    of    his 


MaHes  raigne  to  gratefie  the  Earle  of 
Thomond.  The  Earle  of  Clanriccard 
was  contented  it  shold  be  divided  from 
the  government  of  Connaght. 

'  Until  the  beginning  of  the  reigne  of 
Queen  Elizabeth  the  ordinary  Justice 
of  the  Kingdome  hadd  little  passage  in 
Conaght  the  English  races  remayninge 
under  the  rule  of  the  Bowrks,  and  the 
Irishry  under  the  Cheetfes  of  every 
particular  septe,  the  whole  province 
bearinge  the  name  of  the  County  of 
Conaght — whereof  there  was  one  Sher- 
riffe  whom  the  people  little  respected, 
at  what  time  the  said  Queene  erected  a 
presideall  seat,  and  establyshed  a  Presi- 
dent andCouncell  for  the  administration 
of  justice  within  the  province,  and  de- 
vided  yt  into  five  shyers  which  ordinance 
continues  unto  this  time. 

b  '  The  river  of  Ballashennagh  and 
the  Loghe  Ecarne.' — Description  of 
Connaght  in  16 12. 

c  '  Leaveth  that  parte  uninclosed. — 
Dymmok. 

'  It  is  a  fruitful  province  but  hath 


CONNAUGHT. 


123 


In  Connaught  are  Six  Counties, 


Clare  Maio 

Galway  Slego 

many  Boggs,  and  thick  woods,' — Mory- 
son,  Part  iii.,  p.  158. 

'  The  insurgent  forces  there  in  April 
1599,  were  3090  f.  and  260  horse.' — 
Car.  Ca/.,  year  1599,  p.  300. 

'  Her  Majesty  has  to  keep  a  force  of 
2300  f.  and  75  horse  ;  and  such  is  the 
waste  and  ruin,  specially  in  grain,  as 
we  are  driven  to  victual  most  of  these 
companies  out  of  her  Majesty's  store.' 
— Nov.  5,  1597,  Car.  Cat. 

The  Queen's  forces  in  1599  were; 
Horse — Earl  of  Clanrickard,  50;  Pro- 
vost Marshal,  10;  Sir  Theobald  Dillon, 
15  ;  Captain  Blunt,  12.  Foote — E.  of 
Clanrickard,  100 ;  E.  of  Dunkellin, 
150;  Sir  A.  Savage,  200  ;  Sir  Thomas 
Burke,  100;  Sir  H.  O'Connor,  100; 
Sir  T.  Dillon,  100;  Badbye,  150; 
Plunket,  100  ;  Mostian,  100  ;  Tibot  ne 
Long,  100;  Floyd,  150;  Roper,  150; 
Oliver  Burke,  100;  T.  Burke,  100; 
David  Bourke,  100.  Total,  horse,  87  ; 
foot,  1800. — Moryson. 

In  1602  there  were  151  h.  and  2100 
f. — Car.  Cal. 

Connaught  was  of  all  provinces  '  the 
most  troublesome  in  1588,'  the  most 
out  of  order  in  1601  ;  'being  ever  a 
rebellious  province  of  itself,  the  less 
counties  the  governor  hath  to  govern 
the  better,  and  hence  Clare  should  not 
be  added  to  it.' — Car.  Cal.  year  1588, 
p.  3  ;    year  1601,  pp.  49  and  174. 


Leytrim 
Roscoman. 

Sir  Conyers  Clifford  reported  in 
September  1597,  that  the  total  number 
of  men  now  in  action  is  2600  at  least. 
In  April  1597,  we  are  told  that  'not  one 
of  the  six  shires  is  free  from  revolt ; 
Clifford  with  21  companies  of  foot  and  a 
half,  besides  horse,  is  not  strong  enough 
to  reduce  them,  for  his  companies  are 
weak,  and  O'Donnell  tyranizeth  over 
most  of  these  people  at  his  pleasure.' 

Sir  Conyers  Clifford,  a  brave  and 
good  man,  with  1900  foot  under  25  en- 
signs and  with  about  200  horse,  was 
defeated  by  400  Irish  under  O'Rurke. 
He  was  wounded,  and  was  so  indignant 
at  the  flight  of  his  men  that  'he  brake 
in  a  fury  away  from  Sir  J.  Mac  Swine 
and  Capt.  Oliver  Burke's  lieutenant, 
who  wanted  to  save  him  by  taking  him 
off  the  field ;  and  alone  he  rushed  on 
the  pursuers,  in  the  midst  of  whom 
after  he  was  stroake  through  the  body 
with  a  pike ;  he  died  fighting.' — Dym- 
mok. 

'The  Irish  of  Connaught  were  not 
pleased  at  his  death,  for  he  had  been  a 
bestower  of  jewels  and  riches  upon 
them,  and  he  had  never  told  them  a 
faslehood.' — Four  Masters. 

'  In  1600  O'Donnell  made  an  incur- 
sion into  Clanrickard  and  Clare,  in 
which  he  was  joined  by  O'Rourke, 
O'Connor  Sligo, O'Connor  Roe,McDer- 
mot,  and  McWilliam.'—  Four  Masters. 


124 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  CLARE.3 

This  Countie  beareth  the  name  of  the  Castle  of  Clare  belong- 
to  the  Earle  of  Thomond.      It  contayneth  Nine  baroniesb 


a  Carew  writes  to  Cecil  in  June  1602, 
'  The  Earle  of  Thomond  hath  no  other 
suit  in  England  but  to  annex  Thomond 
to  Munster,  which  if  he  may  not  obtain 
his  heart  is  broken.' 

'  In  the  county  of  Clare  when  I  be- 
held the  appearance  and  fashion  of  the 
people,  I  would  I  had  been  in  Ulster 
again ;  for  these  are  as  mere  Irish 
as  they,  and  in  their  outward  form 
not  much  unlike  them  ;  but  we  found 
that  many  of  them  spake  good  English, 
and  understood  the  course  of  our  pro- 
ceedings well.  The  best  freeholders 
next  to  the  O'Briens  are  theMcNemaraes 
and  the  O'Laneyes,  the  chief  of  which 
appeared  in  civil  habit  and  fashion,  the 
rest  are  not  so  reformed  as  the  people 
of  Munster.' — Sir  J.  Davis,  Car.  Cal. 
May  1606. 

b  A  Trinity  Coll.  MS.,  marked  E.  2. 
14,  and  the  Carew  MSS.,  vol.  611,  give 
the  following  account  of  Clare  : — 

It  conteyneth  whole  Thomond  being 
in  length  from  Leyme  Concollen  to 
Killalowe  45  myles,  and  in  bredth  from 
Lymericke  to  Beallaleynee  25  myles, 
which  of  auncient  tyme  was  devi'led 
into  9  Troghkyeds  or  hundreds,  and  is 
nowe  appoynted  to  be  conteyned  in  3 
Baronies. 

The  Barony  of  Tullaghnenaspule  con- 
teyneth   Macnemaries   als    Mortimers 


country  by  East ;  the  Baron  of  Inshy- 
quyn  and  Donel  Reogh  mac  ne 
mare  chief  in  the  Same.  The  castles 
are  38  in  number. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
Donell  Reogh,  of  Tullaghe 
Edmunde  O'Grady,  of  Toymegreene 
Edmunde  O'Grady,  of  Muyno 
Donogh  and  ]  of  ffertan 

Rory  Macnemare  j  Garongharagh 
Donell     Reogh     Macnemare,   ffyckle- 

nearly 
Rorye  Mac  ne  Mares  Sons,  Hand  Cahir 
Donogh  Mac  ne  Mare,  of  Kilallowe 
Muriertagh,  Custos  of  Obriens  bridge 
The    Baron    of   Inshiquin,   of  Castell 

Loghe 
Sohane  ne  Geyllagh,  of  Dunasse 
Donel  Roe,  of  Cullistecke 
Teige  oge  McConmea,  Neadennury, 
Tirilogh  M'Donel  roo,  Glanomra 
Donel  Reoghe,  Sohort  Castel  in 
Tirlagh  Obrien,  of  Glanoradone 
S°hida  McRory,  Moynengeanagh 
S°hane    McNamares,    Son   of    Moyin- 

tallone 
Donell  Reogh,  Tyrowanyn 
S°hane  McMahoun,  Euaghhowleyne 
S°hane  McDonell,  of  Beallakullen 
Brian  M'Donell  Roo,  Ballgarilly 
Cornea  McMahown,  Ballmitlayne 
Therle  of  Thomond,  of  Castell  Callogh 
Donogh  McConoghor,  Ahereynagh 
ffymyn  McLaghlin,  of  Roscoe 


COUNTY  OF  CLARE. 


I  2< 


and  2  small  Byshopricks,  Killallo,  and  Kilfeneraghe,  the  former 
subject  to  the  Archbishop  of  Cashell  in  Mounster  the  Latter  to 
the  Archbishop  of  Tooam.  This  Countie  is  situated  between 
two  Bayes  of  Limerick  and  Galloway,  the  one  to  the  East  and 
the  other  to  the  West  the  Countie  of  Galloway  to  the  North 
and   the     Sheynan    to    the    South-east.        It    hath    2    market 

]  and  in  each  ane  Abbey, 

DonoghObrien,  Ballychara 

Donel  McS°hida  Matagh,  Granaghane 

S°hane  Omulhonery,  Ballynegeyne 

Donel  McSohida,  Ralahyn 

Therle  of  Thomond,  Rosmonagher 

ffynnin  Mclaghlin,  Legwaro 

Donel  McTege,  Crathallaghmore 

S°hane  McNemare,  Crathallaghmoello 

Therle  of  Thomond,  Bunratty 

and  of  Cloynmoneagh 
Donel  Mcne  mare,  Crathallaghkell 
Muriertagh  Obrien,  Dromloyne 
Donogh  Maglanchy,  of  Claynloghane 
TegeMaglanchy,  of  Balleneclogh 
Muriertagh  Maglanchy,  Nerlyn 
Brien  na  fforiry,  of  ffynis 
Macenery  heny,  of  Ballenecraige 
Donogh  Obrien,  of  Raehavellayne 
Tege  M'Murrogh,  Ballyconill 
Donogh  O'Gradey,  Cloyne 
S°han  Mac  mahown,  Corballe 
Donogh  Maglanchy,  Bodovoher 

The  Baronie  of  Cloynetherala  con- 
teyninge  East  Corkewasten.  Tege 
Mac  Mahoone  Chiefe  in  the  Same, 
Castles,  7. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
Tege  Mac  Mahown,  of  Dangen  My- 
burke 

and  of  Cloynetheralla 


Townes  Inish  and  [ 

Tege  Oultagh,  Ballymogashill 
Coverey  McS°hanerey,  Quaronenvyre 

Cullan 
Rory  M'Mahown,  of  Kelkissin 
Lysofine 
Lysmieghan 
Tirilogh  Obrien,  of  ffomara 

and  of  Tyriedagha 
S°hane  McNemara,  Caeppagh 
Edmund  O'Grady,  Sheriffe 

Trugh 
Rory  Moell  Mcffynnyn,  Beallagha 

The  Barony  of  Dangen  conteyninge 
West  Mac  ne  Mares  Countrey.  S°hane 
Mac  ne  mare  Chief  in  the  Same. 
Castles,  43. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
S°hane  Mac  ne  mare,  of  Dangen 

and  of  Croppoke 
Tirilagh  Obrien,  of  Croppoke 
Sohane  Mac  ne  mare,  of  Dangan  breake 
Donogh  McMurrogh  Obrien,  Qyynhi 
Domea  Mac  Mahown,  Dromollyn 
William  Nellan,  Beallahanyn 
Brene    Obrien,    of    Castleton    Nene- 

nanogh 
James  Nellan,  of  Ballycaston 

Ballyally 
Conoghor  Maglanthy,  Ballycharelle 
Mughane 


126 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Bonrattie  the  Earle  of  Thomond's  chief  Hous 
Clare  belonging  to  him  also 
Cowland 
Principall    Inchequin  belonging  to  the  Baron  thereof 
Castles  Towne 

Dunnas  Mr-  Waterhous 
Ballivaghan  belonging  to  Sir  Turloghe  O'Bryen 


and  of  Cahiracon 
and  of  Ballamacollman 
Derecrossan 
Tege  McConer  Obrien,  of  Corubirig- 

hane 
Tege  McMuriertagh  Cam,  Dunegroek 

The  Baronie  of  Moyartha  which 
conteyneth  West  Corke-Wasken.  Tir- 
lagh  McMahoun  Cheife  in  y°  Same. 
Castles,  8. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles, 
Charles  Cahane,  of  Inyshkathyn.    This 
man  by  inheritance  is  called  a  Cour- 
boe. 
James  Cahane,  of  Ballykette 
Tirlagh  M'Mahown,  of  Carrighowly 
and  of  Moyartha 
and  of  Dunlykill 

Dunsumayn 
So'  Donell  Obrien,  Knight,  Dunmore 
and  of  Dunbeg 

The  Baronie  of  Tuogh  Morey  Conor 
conteyninge  Corkemroe.  Sor  Donell 
Obrien,  Knight,  Cheife  in  ye  Same, 
Castles,  23. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles, 
O' Conor,  of  Inysdyman 
Sor  Donell,  of  Glan 

and  of  Ballighanyre 


Tullowmore 
Tege  McMurrogh,  of  ffante 

Ballyngowne 
Inshcovee 
Ballighany 
Ravine 
Sir  Donell  O'Brien,  of  Beancoroe 
Tege  McMurrogh,  of  Cahirmenayn 
Sor  Donel  Obrien,  of  Tullagh 
Tege  McMurrogh,  Leymenegh 
So'  Donell  Obrien,  of  Dunegoir 
Tege  McMurrogh,  of  Dumnycphellen 

Knockefyne 
Conogher  Maghanchy,  Tuomolyn 
Tege  McMurrogh,  of  Ballenelakyn 
and  of  Beallaghe 
Loghbuligin 
Kyhnua 
So'  Donell,  of  Dughe 

and  of  Lyscanuire 

The  Baronie  of  Gragans  conteyning 
the   countrey   of   Buren,     O'Loghlen, 
Cheife  in  the  Same.     Castles,  20. 
Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
Ologhen,  of  Cahirclogan 

Lysiglysin 

Cahiricnacty 

Ballemoroghee 

Moghenees 

Glensteed 


COUNTY  OF  CLARE. 


127 


Men  of  Name 
in  this  Count ie 


Ologhlen,  of  Gragan 

Glanoeynagh 

Ballyveaghane 

S°hanemokenes 

Novknesno 

Kynveare 

Turlagh 

Glancollayn 

Killy 

Nacapaghee 

Castleton 

Ballyheaghayne 

Kreaghwill 

Rugham 

The  Baronie  of  Tullagh  Idea.  Sor 
Donell  Obrien,  Knight,  Cheife  in  the 
Same.     Castles,  24. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
The  Baron  of  Inshiquin,  Inshiquin 
Sor  Donell,  of  Killinbury 
Mahown      Mcbrene      O'brien,     Bally- 
crottry 

Quarowduffe 
Tirmc  brayne 
Tege  McMurrogh,  of  Bohneill 
Muriertagh  Garagh,  Cahir  Corkrayne 

Rahe 
Tege  mcMurrogh,  of  Dromenglasse 
Mahown  Odea,  of  Beallnelykee 
Mowghowny 
Ogriffee,  of  Ballygriffee 
Donogh  Duffee  McCosedin,  of  Bally- 

haraghan 
Therle  of  Thomonde,  Moethrie 


The  Earle  of  Thomond  his  name  Obryan. 
The  L.  Baron  of  Inchiquin,  his  name  in  like 
sort  O'Bryen. 

The  Baron  of  Inshiquin,  Dereowen 

Manygriffane 
Mahown  Obrien,  of  Cloynenouayne 
Dermot  Obrien,  of  Cloyneseleherne 
Owarovv  negule 
Owen  McS°wyne,  Dunymulvihill 
Carigentogher 
Owen  McSDyne,  Bealnefirvearnayn 
Donell  Moel  Odea,  Desert 
Mahown  the  B.  Sonne,  Kilkidry 


The  Baronie  Cloynerawde,  contey- 
ninge  ye  troghkied  of  Cloynrawde  and 
ye  Hands.  Therle  of  Thomonde,  Cheife 
in  the  Same.     Castles,  19. 

Gentlemen,  and  their  Castles. 
Therle  of  Thomond,  Clonrawde 
and  of  Clare 
and  of  Inish 
The  Baron  of  Inshiquyn,  Killoyne 

and  of  Ballevecoode 
Conogher  Maglanchy,  Enenshy 
Brene  Duffe,  of  S°hally 
Tege  McMurroghe,  Moghoony 
Tege    McConor    O'brien,    Inishvacwo- 
chny 

and  of  Inishdaghrome 
and  of  Inishnivar 
McGylerervgh,  of  Craigurien 

Tirviglay 
McGraigh,  of  Uandvecraigh 
Tege  McConor,  of  Beallchoricke 
The  Baron  of  Ibrikan  the 

Earle  of  Towmond's  \  Moyobrakan 
eldest  Sonne 


128 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  Two  Byshops 
Sr  Turlogh  0'Bryanc 
Mcne  marre  Reaghed 
McMahone 


Mcne  marre  feud 
George  Blunt  of  Dunas 


Therle  of  Thomond,  Cahir  Rivish 
Tege  Mac  Conogher,  Tromra 
Tege  Mac  Murrogh,  Dunogane 

There  are  8  Baronies,  79  parish 
churches,  and  172  castles,  and  8 
Abbayes. 

The  Abbayes  and  Religious  Houses  are 
Th  abbay  of  Clare   possessed   by  Sor 
Donell    and    Tege     McConor    his 
brother. 

Inish  by  James  Nellan. 
St.  John's  a  nunrye  by 
ye  Baron  of  Inshiquyn. 

Corkomoree. 
Hand  Chanens  by  Therle 
of  Thomonde. 

Kiltena. 

Quynhye,   occupied    by 
ffreers. 
Th  abbey  of  Insh  Cronan. 

From  Car.  Cal,  year  1601-1603,  p. 
472,  it  appears  that  this  Description 
was  written  by  Sir  T.  Cusack  in  1574. 
c  In  601  Sir  Torlogh's  son  and  heir, 
Teig,  was  mortally  wounded  fighting 
against  the  English  ;  he  was  taken  care 
of  by  his  enemy  and  kinsman,  Lord 
Dunkellin  ;  but  soon  died  and  '  was 
buried  successively  at  Loughrea  and 
Athenry.'  '  He  was  expert  at  every 
warlike  weapon,  of  remarkable  energy, 
agility,  mildness,  comeliness  and  hospi- 


tality.' In  1602  Torlogh  and  Conor 
O'B.  were  driven  out  of  the  castles  of 
Derryowen  and  Ballyanchaislen  by  the 
Earl  of  Thomond.  Torlogh  escaped, 
but  the  chieftains  Conor  and  Brian 
O'B.,  with  their  followers,  were  hanged 
on  trees  in  pairs  face  to  face.  In  1602 
Torlogh,  grandson  of  Bishop  O'B.  was 
slain  by  Burke  of  Derrymaclachtny. — 
Four  Masters.  Morogh  O'B.  of  Duagh 
lived  at  this  time,  and  had  a  son  mar. 
to  a  dau.  of  Edward  O'Hogan. — Lodge. 

d '  The  two  Mac  Namaras,  if  the 
countrie  were  quiet,  might  live  like 
principal  Knights  in  England.' — Syd- 
ney's Letters,  fol.  vol.  i.,  p.  102.  '  Mac 
Conmara  Fionn  (John  son  of  Teig)  d. 
in  1602  ;  his  son  Donnall  took  his 
place.' — Four  Masters. 

eTeig  Caoch  MCM.,  Lord  of  West 
Corcabhascin,  captured  an  English 
ship  in  1598,  which  put  in  near  his 
Castle  of  Carriganchobhlaigh  (Carriga- 
holt)  ;  he  also  took  back  Dunbeg,  one 
of  his  own  castles,  from  a  Limerick 
merchant  who  'held  it  in  lieu  of  debt;' 
in  1599  he  was  driven  out  of  his  terri- 
tory by  Lord  Thomond;  he  then  joined 
the  Earl  of  Desmond,  assaulted  by 
night  Thomond's  son,  Donnall,  wound- 
ed him,  slew  many  of  his  people 
and  imprisoned  him.  In  1602,  being 
asked    by   O'Sullevan    for   a   loan   of 


COUNTY  OF  CLARE. 


129 


Ogardie 
Oneylands 
O'Laughlin 
Oclancheyh 

his  ship  to  send  to  Spain  for  assist- 
ance, he  refused,  sent  his  son  and 
other  guards  to  defend  it,  and  when 
O'Sullevan  approached  in  a  boat  to 
seize  it,  Teig,  who  was  with  him,  called 
to  his  men  to  fire  on  O'Sullevan,  and 
was  accidentally  shot  by  his  own  son. 
'  There  was  no  triocha-chead  (barony) 
of  which  Teig  was  not  worthy  to  be 
Lord,  for  dexterity  of  hand  and  bounty, 
for  purchase  of  wines,  horses  and  lite- 
rary works.  Mortagh  MCM.  of  Cno- 
canlacha  d.  in  1598.' — Four  Masters. 

'Slain  in  1599  by  Turlogh  O'Brien, 
whose  lands  he  held. 

g  James  O'N.,  who  kept  open  house, 
d.  in  1599. 

h  Baolach  McClancy  of  Cnoc-Finn  d. 
in  1598  ;  he  was  fluent  in  Latin,  Irish 
and  English  ;  was  M.P.  for  Clare  in 
1585.  Also  Maolin  Oge  M'Brody, 
who  in  1563  succeeded  his  brother  as 
Ollav  of  Hy-Bracan  and  Hy-Fearmaac, 
d.  at  Ballybrody  in  1602.  There  was 
no  one  in  Eire  who  was,  together,  a 
better  historian,  poet,  and  rhymer  than 
he. — Four  Masters. 

O'Daly  had  a  white  house  at  Finny- 
vara,  'great  its  wealth,  bestowing 
without  folly ;  it  were  a  sufficiently 
loud  organ  to  hear  his  pupils  reciting 
the  melodies  of  the  ancient  schools.' — 
Tribes  of  Ireland. 


George  Cusackf 
Edward  Mostyne 
Edward  Whyte 
Mr-  Waterhous. 

Dermot  O'Dea  of  Tully  O'Dea  was 
killed  in  1598;  Hugh  O'Hogan  was 
slain  in  1597,  in  a  battle  between  the 
O'Briens  and  the  Clanwilliam  Burkes  ; 
'  he  was  by  no  means  the  least  distin- 
guished son  of  a  chieftain  for  goodness 
and  wealth.' — Four  Masters. 

In  1585  the  'Lords  spirituall  and 
temporall,  chieftains,  gents,  &c,  of 
Thomond  were — Donogh  Earle  of  Tho- 
mond;  Murrough  lord  baron  of  Inchie- 
quin;  the  Reverend  fathers  in  God, 
Mauricius  Bishopp  of  Kyllalowe ; 
Daniell  elect  bishop  of  Kyllmnoraghe; 
Donogh  O'Horane  dean  of  Kyllalow; 
Daniell  Shinnaghe,  deane  of  Kyllfi- 
noraghe;  Denis,  arch-deacon  of  the 
same;  Sir  Edward  Waterhouse  of 
Downassee,  krit.;  Sir  Tyrrelagh 
O'Brien  of  Ennestyvey,  knt. ;  John 
JVFnemara  of  Knappock,  otherwise 
called  McNemarra  of  Westcloncullun ; 
Donell  Reagh  McNemarragh,  of  Gar- 
rowelagh,  otherwise  called  McNemar- 
raghe  of  East  Cloncullin;  Teige 
McMahoune  of  Clonderralae,  otherwise 
called  McMahoune  of  Castle-Corko- 
waskin;  Tyrrelaghe  McMahoune  of 
Moyurtye,  chief  of  his  name  in  West 
Corkowaskin ;  Moriertagh  O'Brien  of 
Dromeleyne,  gen. ;  Mahowne  O'Brien  of 
Clondevvan  gen.;  Owny  O'Laughleine 
of    the     Gragans,     otherwise     called 

R 


130 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 


In   this   Countie   the  Earle  of  Thomond's  Brother,  called 
Teag  O' Bryan,"  and  some  few  with  him  are  in  rebellion. 


O'Laughlene;  Rosse  O'Laughlin  of 
Glancollum-Kyllie,  tanest  to  the  same 
O'Llaghlen;  Mahone  and  Dermott 
O'Dae  of  Tullaghadae,  chieffe  of  their 
names;  Connor  Mac  Gilreoghe  of 
Cragbreane,  chieffe  of  his  name ;  Tyrre- 
laghe  MacTeig  O'Brien  of  Beallacorege, 
gen. ;  Luke  Bradey  sonne  and  heire  of 
the  late  bishopp  of  Meath;  Edward 
White  of  the  Crattelagh,  gen. ;  George 
Cusacke  of  Dromoylen,  gen.;  Boetius 
Clanchie  of  Knockfynney,  gen.;  John 
McNemara  of  the  Moetullen,  gen. ; 
Henry  O'Grady  of  the  iland  of  Inche- 
cronan,  gen. ;  Donnogh  McClanchie  of 
the  Urlion,  chieffe  of  his  name; 
Donnoghe  Garraghe  O'Brien  of  Balle- 
cessye,  gen. ;  Connor  O'Brien  of 
Curharcorcae,  gen. ;  and  George  Fann- 
ing Limerick  merchant.' — See  lar-Con- 
nacht,  p.  358. 

''He  had  600  f.  and  50  horse  in 
1599,  and  not  one  castle  there  kept  for 
the  Queen.' — Moryson. 


Teig  had  mar.  Slaine,  dau.  of 
Teig  O'Brien,  of  Smithstown,  son  of  the 
1  st  Earl  of  Thomond,  and  by  her  was 
father  of  Tirlogh  of  Ballyslattery, 
Colonel  Morogh,  and  Dermot  '  the 
Good.' — Hist.  Memoir  of  the  O'Briens, 
p.  496. 

In  1598  Teig  took  the  Bridge  of 
Portcroisi,  the  castles  of  Cluain,  and 
Sgairbh.  In  1599  eight  companies  of 
English  and  Irish  soldiers  were  march- 
ing from  Kilkeedy,  through  Bealach  an 
Fhiodhfail  (Rockforest),  Teig's  people 
attacked  them  ;  more  of  the  Queen's 
people  were  slain,  but  the  Irish  lost  a 
gentleman  named  Dermot  Roe  O'Brien. 
Teig  then  made  peace  with  the  Queen, 
and  dismissed  his  hirelings  ;  and  the 
English  and  Irish  besieged  and  took 
the  castle  of  Cahirminane  belonging 
to  Tirlogh  O'Brien,  whose  brother 
Dermot  was  slain  at  Rockforest. — Four 
Masters. 


COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY. 


131 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY. 

This  Countie  contayneth  a  great  quantity  of  Land  lying  in 
a  manner  Square  between  thomond  and  maio,  South  and  North 
between  the  Sheynen  and  the  Sea  East  and  West.  It  hath  the 
River  suck  and  the  Countie  of  Roscoman  to  the  Northeast 
thereof. 

This  Countie  hath  three  Byshopricks 
Tooam  one  Byshoprick 
Clonfert  a  Byshoprick  upon  the  Sheynen 
Kilmacoughe     a     Byshoprick     in     Oshaghnes 
Countrie 
Corporal  Galloway3  exceeding  fayre  and  well  built 

Townes  Athenrieb  all  ruined  saving  the  Wall 


aA  proper  neat  city. — Campion. 
The  townsmen  and  wemmen  present 
a  more  civil  show  of  life  than  other 
towns  of  Ireland  do. — Lord  Justice  Pel- 
ham.  Noe  towne  in  the  three  nations 
(London  excepted)  is  more  consider- 
able for  commerce. — H.  Cromwell  and 
Privy  Council  quoted  by  Hardiman. 
The  Description  of  Connaught  of  the 
British  Museum,  dated  1612,  which 
seems  identical  with  that  of  the  Lam- 
beth MSS.  written  by  Sir  Oliver  St. 
John  in  16 14,  says — '  Galway  is  small 
but  all  of  fayer  and  stately  buildings  ; 
the  fronts  of  their  howses  towards  the 
streets,  being  all  of  hewed  stone,  upp 
to  the  topp,  and  garnyshed  with  fayer 
battlements  in  an  uniform  cowrse,  as 
if  the  whole  towne  hadd  beene  builte 


upon  one  modell.  The  merchants  are 
riche  and  great  adventurers  at  sea. 
They  keepe  goode  hospitality  and  are 
kind  to  strangers,  and  in  their  manner 
of  entertaynement  and  in  fashioning 
and  appearllinge  themselves  and  their 
wives  doe  most  preserve  the  ancyent 
manner  and  state  of  any  town  that  ever 
I  sawe.  The  towne  is  built  upon  a 
rocke  envyroned  almost  with  the  sea 
and  the  ryver,  compassed  with  a  strong 
wall,  and  good  defences,  after  the  aun- 
cient  manner,  and  such  as  with  a  fewe 
men  it  may  defend  itself  against  any 
army.' 

b  '  Eight  miles  from  Galway,  elder 
than  yt,  built  by  the  English,  whiles 
they  hadd  their  swords  in  their  hands, 
and  kept  themselves  close  in  garryson. 


132 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  59§. 

The    principall    Merchants0    and    Citizens    in 

both  are 
Linchesd 


Now  it  hath  a  very  small  and  poore 
habitacion  and  people.  Yet  the  walls 
stand  still  large  in  compass  and  very 
strong  and  fayer.'— Z><\r<r/v/V.  of  Con. 
1612. 
c  The  chief  families  or  '  tribes '  were 

'  Athy,  Blake,  Bodkin,  Browne,  Dean, 

Darcy,  Lynch, 
Joyes,  Kirwan,  Martin,  Morris,  Skerret, 

French.' 

From  1590  to  1609  there  were  7  mayors 
and  16  bailiffs  named  Lynch  ;  4  mayors 
and  5  bailiffs  named  French ;  3  mayors 
and  4  bailiffs  named  Martin.  The 
Mayor  of  1598  was  Nicholas  Kir- 
wan Fitz-Denis ;  the  Bailiffs  were 
Marcus  and  Nat.  Blake.  The  Mem- 
bers for  Galway  in  1585  were  P.  Lynch, 
Yonoke  Lynch,  and  Robuck  French. 
In  1518  the  Corporation  enacted  that 
— '  If  any  man  should  bring  an  Irish- 
man to  brage  or  boste  upon  the  toune 
to  forfeit  i2d.  That  no  man  shall  oste 
or  receive  into  their  houses  any  of  the 
Burks,  McWilliams,  the  Kellies.  nor  no 
cepte  elles  on  pain  of  £5,  that  nether 
O  ne  Mac  shall  strutte  ne  swaggere 
thro'  the  streets  of  Galway.' — Hardi- 
tna/is  Galway,  p.  201. 

Names  of  Galway  Jurymen  in  1609  : 
Lynch  FitzEdmund,  alderman ;  Browne, 
alderman ;  2  Kirwans,  3  Lynches,  2 
Bodkins,  1  Blake,  Athie,  Martin  and 
Bige,  merchants  J  Teig  Ballaghe,  shou- 
maker;  McFollane,brogmaker;  McCogh- 


lane,  weaver;  O'Many,  cottner;  Shoy, 
taylour;  Nolan,  goldsmith  ;  MTnylley, 
glower ;  O'Mollhane,  cooper ;  Duff, 
O'Fodaghe  and  Loghlin,  fishermen. 

d  Ninety  Lynches  were  Mayors  from 
1274   to    1654,    and    not    one    since. 
John  L.  made  Bishop  of  Elphin   by 
Elizabeth  in  1584,  surrendered  the  see 
in  161  r,  'lived  a  concealed  and  died  a 
public  papist,'  is  buried  in  St.  Nicholas' 
Church. — Hardimaris  Galway,  p.  235. 
The  Royal  Visitation  of  1615  says  : 
Wee    found    in    Galway    a    publique 
schoolmaster    named    Lynch,    placed 
there  by  the  citizens,  who  had  a  great 
number  of  schollers  not  only  out  of 
that  Province  but  also  out  of  the  Pale 
and   other  parts   resorting  unto  him. 
We  had  daily  proof  during  our  continu- 
ance in  that  city  how  well  his  schollers 
profitted   under   him,   by   verses    and 
orations  which  they  presented   to  us. 
We  sent  for  that  schoolemaster  before 
us,  and  seriously  advised  him  to  con- 
form to  the  Religion  established,  and 
not   prevailing  with   our   advices,  we 
enjoyned  him  to  forbear  teaching:  and  I, 
the  Chancellor,  did  take  a  recognizance 
of  him  and  some  others  of  his  Kins- 
men in  that  city,  in  the  sum  of  .£4°° 
sterling,  that  from  thenceforth  he  would 
forbear  to  teach  any  more. — lar-Con- 
naught,  p.  215. 

Nich.  L,  Mayor,  had  12  sons;  the 


COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY, 


*33 


Blakese 

Martinsf 

Frenches8 

eldest,  Henry  became  Mayor,  M.P. 
and  a  Baronet  and  was  ancestor  of  Sir 
H.  Lynch  Blosse.  Sir  Henry  d.  in 
1633  leaving  ^500  for  the  marriage 
portions  of  '  poor  maydens  of  the  birth 
of  Galway,  for  ever,'  the  Linches  and 
then  the  Martines  to  be  preferred. — See 
Will  in  lar-Connackt,  p.  36. 

Lynch  of  Shruel  lived  with  much 
splendor  .  .  .  was  grandfather  Fr.  Do- 
minick  L.  the  learned  Regent  of  the 
College  of  St.  Thomas  Seville.  Dr.  J. 
Lynch,  Archbishop  of  Tuam  in  1674, 
said  that,  '  Since  the  time  of  St.  Patrick, 
the  L.  always  preserved  the  Catholic 
faith.'  Dominick  L.  in  1580  built  the 
west  side  of  the  Town  Hall  at  his  own 
expense  and  founded  a  free  school. — 
See  Irish  Arch.  Miscel.,  Vol.  i., 
P-  48,  55- 

e  Blake  of  Ardfry  was  father  of  Sir 
R.  B.,  Speaker  of  the  Supreme  Council, 
and  ancestor  of  Lord  Wallscourt. 
Blake  FitzWalter,  Mayor  in  161 1  and 
1630,  became  a  Baronet  in  1622,  is  an- 
cestor of  Sir  V.  Blake  of  Menlough. 
Nicholas  B.,  merchant,  d.  in  1620,  own- 
ing Kilturroge  etc.  and  lands  around 
Athenry. 

'Francis  M., merchant, d.  1615  seized 
of  Ballyglasse,  etc.  in  Mayo.  Robert 
M.  d.  1622  seized  of  several  lands  in 
Iar-Connaught. 

*  R.  French  d.  1628  possessed  of  the 


Darciesh 
Skerrets' 


castles  of  Dongendrick,  Menlagh, 
etc.  in  Iar-Connaught.  Patrick  F. 
of  the  Castle  of  Monivea,  d.  1630. 
Oliver  Oge  F.  was  Mayor  in  1597  ;  his 
wife,  ne'e  Joyce,  was  called  Margaret 
na  Drehid,  Margaret  of  the  Bridges,  as 
she  built  stone  bridges  all  through  Con- 
naught. — lar-Con.  p.  41,  and  Hardi- 
maits  Galway. 

h  Dorseys  were  Mayors  in  1602  and 
161 4,  and  Bailiffs  in  1602  and  1608. 
On  Darcy's  vault  in  the  Franciscan 
Abbey  we  read — 'Epitaphium  D.  Ja- 
cobi  Darcy  Majoris,  Connaciae  Praesi- 
dis,  Galviae  Praetoris  etc.  Qui  ob.  an. 
1603 

Hie  Amor  Heroum,  Decus  urbis,  Nor- 
ma Senatus, 
Mensa  peregrini,  pauperis  area  jacet. 

This  tomb  was  repaired  by  the  de- 
scendants of  James  Darcy  in  the  year 
1728.  Pray  for  the  dead.'  This  was 
Darcy  Riveach  (the  swarthy);  his  7th 
son,  Patrick,  born  in  1598,  was  a 
famous  lawyer  and  a  member  of  the 
Confederate  Council. 

1  Edmund  S.,  head  of  the  race,  owned 
the  castle  of  Ath-cin  or  Headford  in 
1641.  Skerrets  were  Mayors  in  1594 
and  1605.  Brownes  were  Mayors  in 
1574,  1575  and  1609.  Bodkin  in  1610  ; 
Kirwans  in  1598  and  1608;  Mareis 
(Morris?)  in  1588.  In  the  Church  of 
St.  Nicholas  there  are  tombs  with  the 


134 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Principall  Meleeke  belonging  to  the  Quene 

Castles  Portumno  to  the  Earle  of  Clanrickard 

Balliloughreaghe,  the  Earle  of  Clanrickard's 

chief  Hous 
Ouran  belonging  to  him  also 
Letrim  to  the  Earle's  eldest  Sone 
Goorte 

Dunlaghlen,  to  one  of  the  Odalliesk 
Longfoord 

Clonfert  to  the  Bishop  thereof. 
Ballineslo  to  Capten  Brabazon's  Sone 
The  Castle  of  Teaquin  belonging  to  one  of  the 

O'Kellies1 
The  Castle  of  Athenrie  belonging  to  the  Lord 
Bremingham 


inscription,  '  Pray  for  the  Soule  of 
Alderman  Dominick  Browne  and  his 
Posterity,  who  dyed  in  1576.'  'Here 
lieth  the  Bodys  of  Richard  Browne, 
his  son  Matthew  Browne  and  their 
children — God  rest  their  souls.  Amen. 
1635.'  '  Moriertha  O'Fiemagh,  and  his 
wife  Kate  Kernanigonohiv,  and  his 
brother  Teig  Og.  An.  1580.' — Hardi- 
man's  Galway,  p.  268. 

k  '  Donnall  O'Daly,  a  gentleman,  who 
had  command  of  a  party  of  soldiers 
on  the  English  side,  in  1589  fell  fight- 
ing against  the  Burkes  of  Tirawly.' — 
Four  Masters.  In  1641  Lieutenant 
Dermot  O'D.  with  3  companies  of  foot 
and  30  musketeers  defended  the  Castle 
of  Tirellan  against  the  insurgents — a 
brave  officer,  grandson  of  Dermot  O'D. 


of  Lerra  Co.  Galway,  gent,  who  in  1578 
obtained  from  Elizabeth  the  lordship, 
castles  and  lands  of  Lerra. — Hardi- 
man's  Galway,  p.  112. 

'Hy-Many  or  CKell/s  country 
comprises  the  baronies  of  Athlone  and 
Athcarnan  in  Roscommon,  and  of  Tia- 
quin,  Kilconnell  and  Killian  in  Galway. 
In  1585,  Hugh  O'K.  of  Lisdallon  in 
Roscommon,  who  was  chief,  renounced 
the  title  of  O'Kelly.  His  Tanist, 
Teig  McWilliam  O'K.  of  Mullaghmore, 
was  chief  in  the  baronies  of  Tiaquin 
and  Kilconnell ;  and  Teig's  rival  for 
the  Tanistship  was  Conor  Og  O'K., 
of  Killian  barony.  Under  Teig  was 
O'Mannin  of  Mynloch  (whose  castle, 
says  O'Donovan,  was  lately  destroyed 
by     lightning) ;     under     Conor    was 


COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY. 


135 


Men  of  Name 


The  Castle  of  Donemone  and  Turlevaghan  be- 
longing to  him  alsom 
The  Cabboyhe  belonging  to  Frances  Shayn 
The    Abbey  of   Kilconnell  belonging   to   the 

Ouene 
The   Earle  of   Clanrickard11  his  name  is  Burke 
The  L.  Brymingham  his  name  is  Bremingham 
Sir  Hubert  McDavie°  his  name  is  Burke  Mac- 
koogh 


O'Concannen  of  Kiltullagh. — Hy-Many 
p.  18;  far- Con.,  p.  320. 

m  '  Brymegham' 's  Country,  or  Barony 
of  Donemore ; '  Ullick,  earle  of  Clan- 
rickard ;  Edmond  Brymidgham,  lord 
barron  of  Athenrie ;  Tibbot  boy  McJo- 
nen,  of  Tobberkeoghe  ;  Donyll  O'Hig- 
gin,  of  Killelona  ;  J.  duffe  Brymidgham, 
of  Feartemore ;  R.  Fowlle,  of  Fearte- 
more  ;  W.  Brymidgham,  of  Miltoun. 

n  The  Baronie  of  Clare. 
John  Burke  FitzThomas,  and  McCrea- 
mon,  chiefe  in  the  same. 

Gents  and  Castles. 

Therle  of  Clanricard,  Clare ;  Ullig 
Keogh,  Dromghriffin  ;  J.  Lynch  fitz- 
William,  Yowhule ;  Tybbot  Lyogh, 
Loscananon ;  MacWalter,  called  Thomas 
McHenry,  Ballendufife ;  Moyler  Mc 
Shean,  Cloynebow ;  Walter  Fitz-Ab, 
fitz-Ed.,  Masse ;  N.  Lynch,  Anagh- 
coyne  ;  H.  fitz-Edmond,  Leagkagh  ; 
M'Reamon,  Cloghenwoyr ;  Ullig  Mc 
Reamon,  Castle  Hackett;  Walter  Burke, 
JCilnemanegh  j    McWalter's   sept,   Ca- 


hermorise  ;  Moyler  McReamon,  Anagh- 
kyne  ;  Wil.  Grana  McRic,  Cloghran ; 
Redmund  McMoyler  McRoe,  Bealclar- 
home  ;  Redmund  McWalter,  Aghkyne; 
Ullig  McRichard,  Comor ;  W.  Gaynard, 
Carigin;  Meyler  McRickard,  Taw- 
magh ;  R.  Burke,  Corofifyny ;  J.  fitz- 
Ambrose,  Anbale ;  Thomas  Balue, 
Qworanonyn;  Th.  Ballagh,  Beallabean- 
chere  ;  J.  Burke  fitz-Thomas,  of  Ballin- 
dere,  and  of  Deremaclaghlyn ;  Murrogh 
M'Swyne,  Kyleskiegh  ;  Edmund  Owh- 
ny,  Achrym  ;  Walter  Boy,  Grange  ;  J. 
oge  fitz-John  fitz-Ed.,  Carnan ;  R. 
Burke  fitz-Tho.,  Beallena ;  Tirlagh 
Caragh  McSwyne,  Cahirnefieke ;  Ffoxe's 
castle.  Cas,  33.' — Division  of  Con- 
naught  in  1586.  Brit.  Mus.  See  lar- 
Con.,  p.  148. 

o  <MatDavy£s  Countreye.' 
'Sir  Hubert  Bourke  McDavie,  of 
Glenske,  Knight ;  Davie  McEdmond, 
of  Kilcroan ;  Thomas  M'Henrie,  of 
Ballyme  ;  R  Betaghe,  of  the  Cregg ; 
Hobert  buy  M'Edmond,  of  the  Moate; 
Shane  McUllick  Bourke,  of  Rahenile, 


i3<5 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 

The  several  Houses  of  the  Burchesp  of  Ley- 
trim  Of  Clonrickard. 

A  great  Sept  of  the  O'Kellies1  whereof  are 
manie  Houses. 

The  Omaddensq 


otherwise  called  McWalter,  chiefe  of 
his  name  Shane  McUllicke,  of  Kil- 
mogher,  all  having  lands  or  holdings 
within  the  barony  of  Bellamoe  and 
MacDavie's  Country  by  the  east  the 
river  of  Succke  in  the  countie  of  Ros- 
common.'— lar-Con. 

p  '  There  are  more  able  men  of  the 
surname  of  the  Burkes  than  of  any 
name  in  Europe.' — Sir  J.  Davies,  Car. 
Cat.  an.  1606,  p.  465. 

Country  of  Clanrickard. 

Ulick,  Earl  of  Clanrickard,  the  Lord 
Baron  of  Leitrim  ;  R.  Bourke,  of  Deny 
M'Laghny,  esquire ;  Sherone  Mc 
Knowge,  of  Killenedyaine,  otherwise 
McKowge ;  Ullick  Carraghe  M'Hub- 
bert,  of  the  Dissharte,  called  McHub- 
berte ;  Hubbert  M'Edmund,  of  Gort- 
nemackin  ;  Johnesone,  of  Binmore  ; 
William  Mostonne,  of  the  Downe ; 
Shannock  McWilliam  Roe,  of  the 
Naile,  called  MacWilliam  Roe ;  Walter 
Wall,  of  Droghtye,  chiefe  of  his  name ; 
Redmond  Dolphine,  of  Rarroddy, 
chiefe  of  his  name ;  H.  McSwine,  of 
Cloghervanae ;  O.  McSwine,  Kiltul- 
lage ;  Oene  Mantagh  O'Heine,  of 
Downgorye,  called  O'Heine ;  Connor 
Crone  O'Heine,  taneste  to  the  said 
O'Hiene;     Hubbert    boy    Bourk    Mc 


Redmond,  otherwise  MacEdmond ; 
D.  O'Shaghnes,  of  Gortynchgory  ;  J. 
O'Shaghnes,  of  Ardmollyvan,  compet- 
tytors  for  the  name  O'Shaghnes ;  N. 
Follane,  of  the  Newtone  ;  E.  McUllick 
Bourke,  of  Ballily ;  R.  McWilliam,  of 
Rahale;  Shane  Oge  Bourke,  of  Man- 
nyne ;  Brian  ReoghMcKilkelly,  of 
Cloghballymore. — far-Con.,  p.  323. 

q  O Madden" s  Country. 

'Donyll  O'Madde,  of  Longford, 
otherwise  called  O'Madden ;  Owen 
Balluff  O'M.,  of  Lusmagh  ;  Cogh  O'M. 
of  Killyan ;  Edmond  McDowny,  of 
Rathmore  ;  Donyll  M'Brasill,  of  Dry- 
owen ;  Cathall  Carragh  O'Madden 
.  .  .  having  lands  and  holdings  within 
the  barony  of  Longford,  otherwise 
called  Syllanmuighie.' — lar-Con. p.  32 1. 

In  1596,  when  the  Deputy  sum- 
moned O'Madden's  Castle,  Cloghan, 
to  surrender,  the  ward  answered  that 
if  all  his  soldiers  were  Deputies  they 
would  not  yield,  and  about  186 
persons  were  killed  in  the  Castle,  or 
around  it.  Among  them  were  these 
chiefe  men  —  O'Madden,  of  Cor- 
glogher ;  O'M.,  of  Kineghan;  two 
O'M.,  of  Tomaligh  ;  two  O'M.,  of 
Clare  Madden;  O'M.,  of  Clare. 
In    1602    O'M.   attacked    O'Sullevan 


0'Shaghnesr 
Frances  Shaen. 


COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY. 

Oflagherties5 
Thomas  Dillon,  Justice  of  Conaught. 


o/ 


Beare,  who  was  marching  through 
O'Madden's  country  to  the  north.  In 
1611  Donnell  O'M.,  of  Longford,  Co. 
of  Galway,  'captain  of  his  nation,'  left 
his  manor  and  castle  of  Longford,  etc., 
to  his  son. — Hy-Many,  p.  150. 

'  Sir  Roger  O'Shaughnessy  of  Gort- 
Inchigory  ;  'he  used  to  have  280  reap- 
ers in  harvest ; '  his  fourth  son,  Sir 
Dermot,  d.  in  1606,  seized  of  the  ter- 
ritory of  Kinalea,  or  O'Shaughnessy's 
country,  which  he  left  to  his  heir  Gilli- 
duffe  O'S. — Hy-Fiacrach,  p.  379. 

'  A  rich  and  noble  family.' — Des- 
cription of  Connaught  in  1 6 1 2. 

5 '  The  barony  of  Ballenehence,  con- 
taining the  ii  Conymares,  viii  myles 
long  and  vi  broad  ;  Murrogh  ne  doo 
O'Flarty,  chief  in  the  same. 

Gentlemen,  and  their   Castles,  viz. : — 

Donnell  Ecowga,  Ballenehense  ;  Ed- 
mund Oflartie,  Kyllindowne  ;  Edmund 
McHugh,  A  new  Castle  ;  Ochaghy,  of 
Lettermellan ;  Donell  Ecowga,  Bono- 
wyn  ;  Tege  ne  Buly,  of  Arddearee  ; 
Miles  McTibbot,  Reynivylie ;  Castles, 
7 — Division  of  Connaught  in  1586  ; 
far-Con.,  p.  93. 

'The  Country  of  the  O'Fflahertyes 
called  Eyre-Conaght  in  1585, Sr  Morogh 
ne  doe  of  Aghnenure,  otherwise  called 
O'Fflahertie;  Donell  Crone  O'F.,  of 
the  Cnocke,  competitor  for  the  name 


of  O'Fflahertie  ;  Teig  ne  Boolye  (na 
buile),  of  the  Arde,  otherwise  called 
O'Fflahertie  of  both  Con  o  Marrice  ; 
Owine  fitz-Donyell  Coghie  O'F.,  of 
Bonowen  ;  Moroghe  O'F.,  of  the  sam  ; 
Roger  O'F,  of  Moycullen  ;  Danyell 
McRory  O'F.  of  the  Ovvre  ;  Rory  O'F. 
and  Danyell,  his  brother,  sonnes  to 
Moroghe  ne  Mooe  ;  MThomas  ;  Mc 
Connor ;  O'Halloran  ;  McCahill  Boy 
McDonoghe;  and  McEnry  ;  Lynche,  of 
the  Ballaghe;  Browne,  of  Beamy;  Mar- 
tyne,  of  Gortetleva  ;  Martyne,  of  Bally- 
erter;  Linche,  of  the  Dengine;  Marcus 
Linch  fitz-Nichollas,  of  Furboghe ;  and 
Patrick  ffrence,  of  Curcholline. 

'The  barony  of  Muckullen,  in  1586, 
Murrogh  ne  doe,  chief. 

Gentlemen  and  Castles  (20)  viz.: — 

Rory  O'Flahairte,  of  Muykullen  ;  Mur- 
rogh ne  doe,  of  Nowghe,  and  of  Ach- 
neuir  (Aghnenure)  ;  T.  Colman,  of 
Mynlagh  (Menlo);  Jonick  O'Halorane, 
O'hery ;  O.  O'Halorane,  Bearne  (Bar- 
na) ;  D.  Lynche,  Tyrellan  ;  R.  Skeret, 
Short  Castle  (Castlegar)  ;  Donell  oge 
O'Hologhan,  Qwarown  Brown  (Car- 
robrown) ;  Wm-  and  Redmond  MCW°- 
Ffiegh,  Kellyn;  Redmond  MThomas, 
Ballymuritty ;  Redmond  Reogh,  Bal- 
lindully  ;  Richard  Beg,  Cloynecanyn  ; 
Darby  Augny,  Lysacowly ;  J.  Blake 
fitz-Ricard,   Kiltullagh ;   J.  Blake  fitz- 

s 


138 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  3  Hands  of  Arien'  are  in  this  Countie  within  a  Ken- 
ninge  of  the  Towne  of  Galloway. 

This  Countie  is  in  a  manner  unpeopled  by  reason  of  the 
Spoyles  committed  in  the  last  Rebellion,  partlie  by  the  rebell 
and  partlie  by  the  Souldier,  and  the  great  famine  that  followed 
thereupon,  which  hath  so  wasted  this  countie  that  scarce  the 


Ricard,  Kiltorogh ;  Thomas  Blake, 
Ballemicro ;  Thomas  and  John  Blake, 
Turlagh  ne  sheamon ;  Muriertagh 
O'Conor,  Tullekyhan  ;  M.  Lynch, 
New  Castle.'— far-Con.  pp.  252  &  311. 

O'Flaherty,  of  the  Castle  of  Moy- 
cullen,  d.  in  1599,  and  was  succeeded 
by  his  son  Hugh,  who  was  the  last 
chief  of  his  name,  and  d.  in  1631, 
leaving  a  son,  aged  two  years,  who  be- 
came the  famous  Irish  Antiquary.  A 
considerable  part  of  the  Castle  of  Agh- 
nenure  still  remains. 

'The  barony  of  Ross  or  Joyce's 
country  contains  the  Joyes,  Walshes, 
Partrish  (Partry)  lands ;  M'Thomas 
and  MTybod  chief  in  the  same. 

Gaits,  and  their  Castles,  viz. : — 
MacThomas,  Castlekirke;  Murrogh 
ne  dow,  Ballynonagh;  McEnvile,  Ballen- 
esleo;  Albe  Mc  En  vile,  Cloynlaghell  ; 
R.  M'Moyler  Joy,  Castlenew.'  Titus 
B.  xiii.  fo.  399. — Division  of  Connaught 
in  1586. 

1  In  1588  the  Mayor  and  citizens  of 
Galway  petitioned  Elizabeth  in  favour 
of  Morogh  MTurlogh  O'Brien,  and 
said  that  '  he  and  his  ancestors  under 
the  name  of  McTeig  O'Brien,  of  Arran, 
were  captains  or  lords  of  the  Islands  of 


Arran,  until  of  late  he  was  expulsed  by 
the  usurping  power  of  the  O'Flaherties.' 
In  1575  Morchow  MTirrelagh  Mc 
Donill,  chiefe  of  his  nacion,  called 
Clanteige,  of  Arran,  claimed  the  an- 
cient custom  of  connow  and  meales 
due  to  him  and  his  ancestors,  i.e.,  for 
two  days  and  nights  in  Galway.  The 
'  Gentlemen  of  the  isles  in  1575  were, 
besides  this  captain,  Eturgh,  Morowe, 
M'Morchowe,  Meeagh,  MTirrelagh, 
M'Morchowe,  MTirrelagh  Oge,  and 
McBrene.'  This  clan  descended  from 
Brian  Boromhe. — See  Bardimans  Gat- 
way,  pp.  207  and  52. 

Teig  an  t-sleive  (of  the  mountain) 
O'Fahy  and  8  gentlemen  of  the  name 
had  fee-simple  property  in  the  barony 
of  Loughrea  in  16 17.  There  were  the 
O'Lynes,  of  Ballinvoggan,  Lisnagree, 
and  Lehergen,  in  the  bar.  of  Kilconnell, 
they  were  proprietors  of  handsome 
estates,  and  looked  on  themselves  as 
Firbolgs.  E.  O'Horan,  of  Carrowan- 
meanagh  ;  R.  O'Horan,  of  Carrowan- 
clogha,  on  which  stood  a  castle  ;  and 
others  of  the  name  in  the  bar.  of 
Leitrim.  In  the  bar.  of  Dunmore,  the 
Lallys,  of  Tullaghnadaly,  Ballynaba- 
naby,  and  Lisbally,  paid  chief  rent  to 
Lord  Bermingham  ;  from  the  Lallys  of 


COUNTIE  OF  GALLOWAY. 


139 


hundereth  men  or  Hous  is  to  be  found  now  that  was  Several 
years  ago.  There  is  in  Rebellion  some  of  the  Kellies  and 
Burkes"  and  Omaddens,  and  in  a  sort  all  the  Countie  saving 
the  Towne  of  Galloway  and  the  Earle  of  Clanrickard  and  some 
of  his  Friends. 


Tullaghnadaly  descend  the  Counts 
Lally,  of  France. 

In  the  bar.  of  Leitrim,  McCnavin,  of 
Cranog  MacCnaivin  3  the  head  of  the 
Clan,  Hugo  McNevin,  alias  McKelly, 
having  joined  the  insurgents,  was 
hanged  in  1602  ;  there  were  8  other 
gentlemen  of  the  name  ;  the  last  sup- 
posed head  of  the  clan  was  Dr  McNevin, 
of  1798  celebrity. — Hy- Many  pp.  36, 
28,  88,  182,  68. 

John  Donelan,  son  of  the  Protestant 
Archbishop  of  Tuam,  lived  at  Bally- 
donelan.  John's  brother  became  Lord 
Chief  Justice  of  the  Common  Pleas  ; 
and  his  grandson,  John,  erected  the 
stone  cross  of  Kilconnell,  which  is  said 
by  the  country  people  to  bow  when  a 
Donelan  is  taken  by  it  to  the  grave ;  it 
bears  the  inscription — '  Orate  pro  D. 
Johanne  Donelano,  ejusque  familia,  qui 
hanc  crucem  erigi  fecit  a.d.  1682.' — 
Hy-Many,  p.  172. 

In  1594  Dermoid  Duff  O'Halloran, 
gent,  of  Bearna,  for  a  certain  sum  of 
money,  'dedit,  concessit,  barganizavit 
to  Edmund  Halloran,  Merchant,  of 
Galway,  all  his  maneria,  dcminia,  cas- 
tra,  etc.,  of  Rinemoyly,'  etc.  In  the 
same  year  John  O'Halloran,  of  Gal- 
way, 'piscator,'  gave  to  A.  Martin, 
merchant,   omnia  manerium,  castrum, 


etc.  .  .  .  boscos,  suboscos  .  .  .  montium 
...  in  villis,  campis,  et  hamletis  de 
Rynvile. — far-Con.  p.  255. 

In  the  bar.  of  Kilconnell  were  Brian 
McCooleghan,  of  BallyM'Couleghan, 
and  seven  other  proprietors  of  that 
name.  In  the  bar.  of  Clanmacnowen 
O'Coffey  owned  4  cartrons  of  land. — 
Hy-Many,  p.  184,  84. 

In  the  bar.  of  Kiltartan,  and  chiefly 
in  the  parish  of  Dawros  Kinvara,  there 
were  13  persons  of  the  name  O'Heyne 
in  1641.  The  Four  Masters  record 
the  death  of  O'Heyne,  of  Lydegan, 
in  1594;  he  left  a  son,  Hugh  Buy 
O'H.  There  was  a  Knougher  Crone 
O'Heyne,  of  Ledygan,  gent.,  100  years 
old  and  upwards  in  161 5,  and  O'Heyne, 
of  Killaveragh,  aged  80. — Hy-Fiach- 
rach,  p.  378  and  405. 

"In  1599  the  sons  of  Redmond  Na 
Skoab,uncle  to  the  Earl  of  Clanrickard, 
300  f.  ;  in  Sillanchie,  four  sons  of 
Owen  O'Madden,  who  was  lately  killed 
in  action,  50  f.  ;  in  Iar-Connaught  the 
Joyes,  McDonoghe,  and  the  Flaherties, 
140  f.  In  1598  John  Burke,  'Baron 
of  Leitrim,'  led  some  hundreds  of 
O'Neil's  soldiers,  fighting  through  Con- 
naught,  Leinster  and  Munster. — Car, 
Cal.,  p.  300 ;  and  Four  Masters. 


140 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  MAYO. 

This  Countiea  contayneth  all  the  Land  of  McWilliam  Euter,b 
and  the  Lands  of  the  Omaylies,c  Clandonels,d  McMorice, 
McJordan,  McCustologhe  and  the  [  ]  ;  this  Countie 

hath  in  the  Sea  certain  Hands  both  Fertile  and  most  comodious 


*  In  1574  the  chiefs  of  the  baronies 
were  McMoris  in  Crossbwyhin,  McMoris' 
Country;  in  Kilvean  Wm.  Burk  Fitz- 
John,  E.  Burke  Vaghery,  and  the  Clan 
Jonyns  ;  O'Maley  in  Murisk  ;  Richard 
en-Iren  in  Burres ;  McVadin  in  Kuner- 
more  (Envyremore) ;  John  Mc01iverus 
or  McWilliam,  and  McVadin  called 
Baron  Barret,  in  Many  (Moyne) ; 
McWilliam  Burk,  and  MThilipin  in 
Burrisker;  McJordan  or  Baron  D'Exeter 
in  Beallalahane  ;  McCostello  othenvise 
Baron  Nangle  in  Beallahaunes. —  Car. 
Cal.  1601-1603,  p.  474  and  450. 

In  1587  '  McCostello  his  country' 
was  inhabited  by  Sir  Theobald  Dillon 
and  his  tenants. — far-Con.  p.  340. 

Sir  Theobald  m.  a  daughter  of  Tuite 
of  Tuitestown ;  he  saw  assembled  at 
one  time  in  his  house  of  Killenfaghny 
above  one  hundred  of  his  descendants. 
— Lodge. 

b  '  I  found  McWilliam  verie  sencible, 
though  wantinge  the  English  tongue, 
yet  understanding  the  Latin.  .  .  . 
Surely,  my  Lords,  MacWilliam  is  well 
wonne,  for  he  is  a  great  man ;  his  Land 
lyeth  along  the  West  North  West  Coast 
wherein  he  hath  manie  goodlie  Havens, 
and  is  Lord  of  a  Territorie  of  three  times 


as  moche  Land  as  the  Earl  of  Clan- 
ricarde  is. 

'O'Maylle  came  likewise  with  him, 
who  is  strong  in  galleys  and  seamen. 

'AlsoMacPhatenorBarrett,MacIvyle 
Staunton,  Macjordan  or  Dexter,  Mac 
Custelo  or  Nangle,  MacMorris  or  Pren- 
dergast  .  .  .  all  five  have  been  Englishe, 
which  everye  man  confesseth,  but  also 
Lordsand  Barons  in  Parliament,  as  they 
theim  selves  affirme,and  surely  they  have 
lands  sufficient  for  Barons,  if  they  might 
weeld  their  owne  quietlye.  But  so  base 
and  Barbarous  Barons  are  they  now,  that 
they  have  not  three  hackneyes  to  carry 
them  and  their  train  home.  There 
were  with  me  many  more  of  lower 
degree  and  no  deeper  of  wealth,  as  the 
Chiefe  of  Clanandros  and  Mac 
Thomyn  ;  both  they,  and  many  more 
Barretts,  Cusacks,  Lynches  (Lynottes), 
and  of  sundrie  English  surnames  now 
degenerate.' — Sir  H.  Sydney,  in  1576. 

c  By  inquisition  taken  a.d.  1607,  it 
appeared,  that  Owen  O'Maly,  chief  of 
his  name  and  nation,  and  his  ancestors, 
had  chief  rents,  of  barley,  butter,  and 
money,  out  of  several  lands  within  the 
barony  of  Murrisk ;  that  he  was  seised 
of  the   Castle  of  Cahir-na-mart  (now 


COUNTIE  OF  MAYO. 


141 


for  Shipping,  for  which  purpose  both  Inglyshe  and  Strangers  had 
Intercourse  there.  It  hath  the  Ocean  to  the  West  and  North, 
the  Counties  of  Sligo  and  Roscommon  to  the  East  and  the 
Countie  of  Galloway  to  the  South. 

The  most  part  of  this  Countie  is  possessed  by  the  Burkes,c 
whose  Capten  they  commonlie  call  McWilliam.  They  are  many 
of  the  name  and  Stoute  men  able  to  make  in  tymes  past  before 
the  Warr  consumed  many  of  them  1 500,  the  rest  of  the  Countrie 
is  inhabitted  by  the  McJordans,  McCustulaghes,  and  the  rest  above 
Specified,  who  be  dependers  upon  McWilliam,  and  in  a  manner 


Westport),  the  castle  and  island  of 
Cairo wmore,  etc.,  in  right  of  tanistry; 
and  that  he,  as  chief,  ought  to  have,  as 
his  ancestors  had  'all  fines  for  blood- 
shed, all  skins  of  animals  killed,  or  to 
be  killed,  within  that  barony.' — Iar- 
Con.  p.  58. 

'The  O'Mallies  and  O'Flaherties  pur- 
posed with  600  men,  whom  they  had 
gathered,  to  invade  Kerry.' — Carew  to 
Privy  Council,  May  2,  1601. — Car.  Cal. 
The  O'Mallies  are  celebrated  in  several 
Irish  poems  as  expert  seamen,  as  the 
sea-gods  of  the  West.  Graine  O'M., 
mother  of  Tibbot  ne  long,  first  Viscount 
Mayo,  was  renowned  for  her  bravery  at 
sea.  The  O'M.  were  chiefs  of  the  two 
Ualls,  i.e.  baronies  of  Murrisk  and 
Borrishoole.  O'Dugan  says,  '  A  good 
man  there  never  was  of  the  O'Malleys, 
but  he  was  a  seaman.' 

d  The  Lord  Deputy  wrote  to  the 
Council  in  1576 — '  Out  of  the  Countye 
of  Maio  came  to  me  to  Galway  first 
seven  principall  men  of  the  Clandonnells, 
for  everye  of  their  seven  Linagies  one, 


of  that  surname,  inhabiting  that  Countye, 
all  by  profession  mercenarie  soldiers  by 
the  name  of  Galloglas  ;  they  are  very 
stronge,  and  moche  of  the  wealth  of  the 
countrie  is  under  them  ;  they  are  able 
to  go  where  they  will,  and  with  the 
countenaunce  of  any  meane  Lorde  of 
Force,  to  make  Warre  with  the  Greatest. 
I  won  MacWilliam  Ewghter's  chief  force 
from  him  in  getting  these  Clandonnells.' 

*  The  Burkes  of  Mayo  were  'noble  of 
mind  and  of  good  courage,'  and  with 
the  O'Flaherties  were  considered  '  the 
greatest  nation,  and  possessing  the 
strongest  country  of  any  people  in 
Ireland ; '  and  were  joined  with  the 
O'Rorkes  and  O'Connors — forming  a 
league  of  the  'proudest,  wildest,  and 
fiercest  clans.' — L.  Deputy  to  Walshing- 
ham  in  1589. 

In  1586  the  Bourks,  very  badd  and 
loose  people,  very  hardlye  continued 
themselves  two  years  together  within 
compass  of  obdyence.  The  sons  of 
Edmund  Bourk  of  Castlebar  were  seven 
in  number ;   he  was  an  oulde  man,  a 


142 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


his  Vassals.      They  are  whollie  out   in  Rebellion  saving   one 
principall  man  called  Tibbotnelong/ 

There  are  no  Townes  in  this  Countie  of  any  importance,  but 


competitor  for  the  MacWilliamshippe, 
a  most  badd  member  to  the  state,  and 
his  wife  as  bad  as  himself. — Docwra's 
Narrative,  p.  214. 

'There  are  more  able  men  of  the 
surname  of  Bourke  than  of  any  name 
wheresoever  in  Europe.' — Sir  J.  Davis 
in  1606. —  Car.  CaL,  p.  465. 

In  1589  the  Lower  Burkes  of  Tirawly 
went  on  their  defence,  beat  the  English 
and  Irish  under  Brown  at  Bealach  and 
Diothruibh,  slaying  Brown,  Donnell 
O'Daly  an  officer,  and  Redmond  oge 
Burke  of  Benmore  Castle,  Galway ; 
then  they  were  joined  by  the  sliocht  of 
Oliverus  Fitzjohn  Burke  of  Tirawly, 
by  the  Clan  Donnell  Galloglach,  etc.  ; 
they  ravaged  Connaught  by  day  and 
night  during  the  spring. 

In  1595  Tiboid  Burk  (son  of  Walter 
Kittagh  son  of  John,  son  of  Oliver,  son 
of  John)  laidseige  to  Belleek  Castle 
near  Ballina,  took  it,  beat  and  pursued 
Captains  Bingham,  Foal,  Mensi  and 
Tuite  (son  of  W"1  Boy  Tuite)  slaying 
Foal,  Mensi  and  Tuite.  Then,  as  Clan 
William  Burk  were  at  variance  concern- 
ing the  Lordship  of  the  territory, 
O'Donnell  nominated  Tiboid  chief  in 
presence  of  the  forces  of  O'Donnell  and 
Clanwilliam. 

In  1 601  Walter  (son  of  the  late  Mc 
William  Burke)  was  shot  in  a  battle 
near  Ennis.  Up  to  the  spring  of  this 
year   Lord    M'William    and   Tibot-na- 


Long  were  at  peace,  but  then  the 
descendants  of  Ulick  and  Tibot-na- 
Long  chose  as  M'William,  Rickard 
Burke,  the  son  of  Deamhan  an  Chor- 
rain  ('  Daemonis  Falcati  Alius '  says 
O'SuIlivan,  or,  as  Docwra  puts  it,  '  the 
Devil's  Hook  son').  But  O'Donnell's 
McWilliam  at  Michaelmas  got  help  from 
him,  came  back,  beat  his  rival,  and  the 
sliocht  Ulick  Burke  and  Tibbot-na- 
Long,  in  a  fierce  battle,  in  which  they 
were  mindful  of  their  ancient  grudges 
and  recent  enmities,  and  in  which 
Rickard  was  slain. — Four  Masters. 

This  Tiboid,  the  last  McWilliam, 
retired  to  Spain,  where  his  son  Tiboid 
was  made  Marquess  of  Mayo ;  he  had 
seven  brothers — Oliver  of  Iniscoe  ; 
Ulick  Ruadh  of  Crossmolina;  John  an 
i-sleibhe  (of  the  Mountain);  William 
Fada  (the  Tall)  of  Castlelacken  .  .  . 
Lodge. — '  Viscount  Mayo.' 

'  McWilliam  was  in  action  with  600 
foot  and  60  horse.  Tibbot  na  Long, 
'  of  the  ship,'  so  called  because  he  was 
born  at  sea,  was  son  of  Sir  Richard  an 
Iarain  (of  the  iron)  and  the  famous 
Graine  ni  Maille,  dau.  of  Owen 
O'Malley  of  the  Owles.  His  brothers 
Walter  and  Edmond  were  slain  by  the 
English.  He  defeated  and  hanged  his 
brother-in-law,  O'Connor,  whowas  going 
to  join  the  English  interest ;  in  1599  he 
with  his  followers  maintained  600  f.  and 
60   horse    against    Elizabeth ;    at   the 


COUNTIE  OF  MAYO. 


H; 


many  good  Havens  and  fayre  Castles  belonging  to  the  Gentle- 
men before  named,  whereof  the  chief  is  Castlebury  Ardenery 
Belike,   and    the    Castle    of  |  ]  belonging  to  the 

Earle  of  Ormond 


battle  of  Kinsale  he  fought  on  the 
English  side;  got,  with  his  step-brothers 
Morogh  and  Donall  Ikeggie  O'Flaherty, 
a  re-grant  of  his  lands,  was  member  for 
Mayo  in  1613,  became  Viscount  Mayo 
in  1626.  He  married  a  dau.  of  O'Con- 
nor Sligo.  He  had  4  sons — Miles, 
David,  Tibot  Jtivcagh  (the  strong)  of 
Cloghans,  and  Rickard  (called  Iron 
Dick).  His  daughers  were  mar.  to 
O'Conor  Dun,  O'Flaherty  of  Aghna- 
murra,  Burke  of  Castlehacket,  and 
Burke  of  Turlogh. — Lodge. — 'Viscount 
Mayo.' 

In  1597  he  undertook  with  the  aid  of 
her  Majesty's  forces  to  banish  Tibbot 
Mc\Valter,  the  now  McWilliam  ;  for  re- 
ward to  have  M'William's  lands,  and  in 
lieu  of  the  name  of  McWilliam  to  have 
a  title,  etc. 

In  1597,  the  people  of  Mayo  (except 
W°-  Boork  of  Shroul,  his  son  Oliverus 
McShane,  and  his  brother  Edmond, 
Wm-  Boork  FitzRichard  who  fled  into 
Munster,  and  McMorrice)  in  number 
1500  men  in  action.  Tibbot  ne  Long 
with  the  Devil's  Hook  and  others  had 
put  in  pledges.  MacWilliam  is  in 
action,  in  July  last  lost  200  of  his  men; 
at  his  late  coming  his  brother  Thomas, 
equal  in  mischief  to  himself,  was  slain, 
and  one  of  the  chief  commanders  of 
the  Clandonnels,  with  30  or  40  of  his 


men — their  heads  sent  to  me  by  Tibbot 
ne  Long.  M'William's  forces,  with  400 
out  of  O'Donnel's  country  amount  to 
700. — Car.  Cal.,  year  1597,  p  265, 
270. 

The  chief  men  in  1585  were — Sir 
Richard  Bourke  of  the  Newton, 
knight,  otherwise  called  McWilliam 
Eughter — Walter  Kettagh  Bourke  of 
Bealycke  and  Crossmalyene — Bourke 
of  Ardnery — E.  Bourk  Mc01iver  of 
Ropa — Barret  of  Ross,  otherwise  called 
McPadin,  chief  of  his  name — Barret  of 
Ballasseekery — Myly  McEvily  of  Ken- 
turk,  otherwise  called  M'Evily,  chiefe  of 
his  name — Bourke  of  Castlebar,  tanest 
to  the  said  McWilliam  Eyghter — Bourke 
of  Ballenecarrae,  otherwyse  called  the 
blinde  abbote — Moyler  B.  of  Castle 
McKerra — Tybbott  Reoghe  Bourke  of 
Boherfayne — Evagher  McJordan  of 
Bellalahen,  otherwise  called  McJordan, 
chief  lord  of  the  barony  of  Bellalahan  or 
Gallen — Moyller  McJurdan  of  the  New- 
castell — Walter  Leaghe  McStevane 
of  Corran  McStephane — Jordan  Mc 
Thomas  of  Ballahaghe — R.  McMoryse 
of  the  Bryse,  otherwise  called  McMory- 
she,  chiefe  of  his  name — McMoryshe  of 
Castell  M'Geralte — Walter  McErydry 
of  Castell-Reoghe — William  Bourke  of 
Shrowell — Bourke  of  Conge — R.  oge 
Bourke  of  Cloynecashell — Molaghlyne 


i44 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  SLIGO. 


Sligo*  contayneth  all  the  Lands  betweene  the  River  of 
Earne  and  the  plaine  of  Conaught  by  the  Skirts  of  the  Moun- 
tains of  Ballibyan  and  Curleges  to  the  river  of  the  Boyle  in 
McDermots  Countrie  and  from  thence  North  west  by  the  River 
of  Moyne  which  divideth  the  Countie  of  Maio  from  the  Countie 
of  Sligo.  So  hath  it  the  River  of  Earne  to  the  East,  Maio  to 
the  West,  the  Sea  to  the  North,  and  the  Countie  of  Roscomon  to 
the  South. 


O'Mayle  of  Belclare,  otherwise  called 
O'Mayle,  chiefe  of  his  name — Teige  roe 
O'Mayle  of  Cahairenemart — Ouan 
O'Mayle  of  the  same — Dermot  McArte 
of  Clare— Gilleduffe  McGibbon  of  Bally- 
nekellye — R.  oge  McGibbon  of  Glan- 
kyne — Sherrone  McGibbon  of  Lackane 
— fitz  Symons  of  Dunmacknynye — 
Walter  MThillipyne  of  Brehe,  other- 
wise called  MThillypyne,  chiefe  of  his 
name — Ferraghe  McTirrlage  roe  of 
Carrickmadye — E.  oge  M'Gibbon  of 
Derrymacgornan — W.  Bourke  of  Tor- 
rane — R.  oge  M'Tomyne  of  Ballicroen 
— Barret  of  Dowlaghe — J.  Browne  of 
the  Neyle — Barret  of  Kyrenan — Caree 
of  Downmacknyny.  — Iar-Connaught, 
P-  331  to  338. 

a'  It  hath  of  auncyent  or  new  Eng- 
lish none ;  off  Irishie — O'ConnorSligoe, 
the  McDonoghes,  the  O'Dowdes,  the 
O'Haraes,  the  O'Hartes,  some  of  the 
M'Swynes  and  others.' — Description  of 
Connaught  in  Arckaol,  vol.  27.  The 
Lord  Deputy  reported  in  1576  that 
O'Connor   '  hath    under   his   Tyranny 


O'Dowd,  two  McDonoghes,  two 
O'Hares  and  Agare,  and  yet  he  himself 
trybutarie  to  O'Donnell.  They  be  all 
men  of  great  lands,  the  countye  is  well 
inhabited,  and  ritche  and  more  haunted 
with  strangers  than  I  wish  it  were.' — 
See  Iar-Con.  p.  300. 

'  The  lords  and  chieftains  in  the  year 
1586  were — Sir  Donyll  O'Connor  of 
Sligo,  knight ;  Pheolyme  O'Harte  of 
Ardtarmon,  otherwise  called  O'Hart, 
chief  of  his  name;  O'Connor  of 
the  Grawndge ;  Edmond  O'Dowey 
(O'Dowda)  of  Killglasse,  otherwise 
called  O'Dowey,  chief  of  his  name  ; 
Hubert  Albenaghe  of  Rathly  ;  Breene 
M'Swyne  of  Ardneglas ;  Dowdy  of 
Castle-Connor ;  Cormocke  O'Harry 
(O'Hara)  of  Cowlany,  otherwise  called 
O'Harey  buy,  chief  of  his  name; 
Ferral  O'Harry  of  Ballinefennock,  other- 
wise called  O'Harry  reoghe,  chief  of 
his  name;  O'Harry  of  Tulwy; 
O'Harey  of  Cowlany;  Ferrdorraghe 
MTJonoghe  of  Cowlea,  otherwise 
called  M'Donoughe  Tyrreryll,  chief  of 


COUNTIE  OF  SLIGO. 


145 


It    hath   in   it  no  Towne  but  Sligo,  a  Sea  towne   with  a 
Haven,  which  the  Castle  Shot. 
Principall  \  Sligo  belonging  to  the  Quene. 
Castles     )  Ballerb  belonging  also  to  the  quene. 

belonging  to  O'Donnell  who  claimeth  a 
chief  rent  of  ^240  per  Annum  out  of 
O'Connor  Sligoes  Country. 

It  is 


Bondrois 
Belike 


The  chief  L.  of  this  Countie  is  O'Connor  Sligoe.c 


his  name  ;  McDonogh  of  Ballyndowne; 
IVPDonogh  of  Cowlwonye ;  McDonoghe 
of  Clonemahyne  ;   Cene  McHughe  of 
Bryckleawe ;    Croftone  of  Ballymote  ; 
Goodman     of    Taghtample ;      Manus 
Reoghe     of     Rathmollyne ;       Manus 
M'Teig    buy   of    Lysconnowe ;     Mac 
Swyne   of    Loughtnevynaghe ;     Uryel 
Garrey    of    Moye,     otherwise     called 
O'garry,    chief    of    his    name ;     Rory 
O'Garry   of    Kearrowercogh ;     Manus 
McBryene  Reoghe  of  Levally.  .  .  .  Sir 
Donill  O'Connor  shall  have  the  castles 
of  Sligo  in  the  barony  of  Carbry,  and 
Meynlagh  in  the  bar.  of  Magherylenye, 
etc.      In   the  bar.   of  Corran   Carmac 
O'Harry  Buy  shall   have  his  castle  of 
Cowlany,    Ferragh    Carragh    O'Harry 
reogh   his  castle    of  Ballinefenock   or 
Ballyharry;    Hugh   McDonoghe    shall 
have  land  in  the  bar.  of  Corran  remov- 
ing  from   Ballymote ;    in  the  bar.   of 
Tirrerel  Ferdoragh  M'Donogh  of  Cow- 
lea,    and     M'Donogh    of    Cowlwony 
Castle ;     in    the    bar.    of   Tirrereagh 
Edmond  O'Dowd    his  castle  of  Kyl- 
glasse,   his   cousin  and   heir  apparent 
Davy   O'Dowd     of    Castle     Connor ; 
Urrel  O'Garry  his  castle  of  Moygarry, 


John   O'Crean  his  house  or  town  of 
Ballynegare. — lar-Connaught,  p.  340  to 

345- 

b  Ballymote  had  belonged  to  the  Queen 
for  the  space  of  thirteen  years,  but  in 
the  summer  of  1598  it  was  taken  by  its 
rightful  inheritors  the  Clan  Donogh  of 
Corran,  namely,  Tomaltach  and  Cathal 
Dubh   M'Donough.     In   autumn  they 
sold  the  castle  to  O'Donnell  for  ^400 
and  300  cows. — Four  Masters,  p.  2076. 
Maurice  McDonogh  of  Tirerill  was 
slain  in  Breifney-O'Rorke  in   1598  as 
he  was  carrying  off  a  prey,  and  then 
Conor  M'Donogh  of  Ballindoon  was 
appointed  MacDonogh. — Four  Masters. 
c  '  Donogh  O'Conor  Sligo,  after  his 
return  from  England  in  1596,  proceeded 
on   behalf  of  the  English    to    reduce 
Connaught;  was   joined  by  the  Clan 
Donough  of  Collooney,  and  had  Bally- 
mote in  his  power.     The  O'Harts  also 
adhered  to  him,  for  they  had  always 
been  faithful  to  the  man  who  held  his 
place ;  and  they  began  to  threaten  the 
Kinel-Connell.     But  O'Donnell   plun- 
dered their  territory;  and  in  February 
1597,  he  defeated  O'Conor  Sligo  who 
had  mustered  an  army  of  English  and 

T 


146 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


most  inhabitted  by  men  of  his  name,  and  few  Vassals  the  chief 
whereof  is  called  Odood.d  This  Countrie  is  in  a  manner  Subject 
to  the  Quene,  yet  are  Rebells  but  against  their  Will,  for  their 
chief  L.  O'Connor  being  in  Suite  for  the  Lordship  of  Sligo  in 
England   7  years  and  the  Rebellion  beginning  long  before  he 


Irish  and  was  marching  on  Sligo.'  How- 
ever in  that  year  O'C.  Sligo  with  the 
help  of  his  brother-in-law,  Tibbot  na- 
Long,  twice  beat  McWilliam  out  of 
Mayo,  and  soon  after,  having  joined 
Tibbot  and  Sir  Conyers  Clifford,  he  was 
severely  wounded  in  a  smart  skirmish 
with  O'Donnell's  cavalry.  Towards 
the  end  of  the  year  he  went  to 
England  and  remained  there  to  the  end 
of  1598.  He  went  with  Essex  on  his 
hosting  through  Munster,  then  joined 
Clifford  in  Connaught,  reached  Col- 
looney  Castle  (belonging  to  McDonogh 
of  Tirerrill)  the  only  castle  which  held 
out  for  O'Conor  Sligo.  It  was  deemed 
impregnable  ;  O'Donnell  besieged  him  ; 
Clifford  going  to  his  relief  with  1900  foot 
and  200  horsewas  beaten  by  O'Donnell, 
and  lost  his  life  in  August  1599. 
O'Conor  Sligo  submitted  and  was 
reinstated  in  his  territory  by  O'Donnell, 
and  got  from  him  '  a  countless  deal  of 
cows,  horses,  etc.,  of  corn  and  other 
necessaries  to  replant  and  inhabit  his 
territory,  after  it  had  been  a  wilderness.' 
In  1600  he  joined  O'Donnell  in  his 
invasion  of  Gal  way  and  Clare  ;  in  1601 
for  dealings  with  the  enemy  O'Donnell 
imprisoned  him  in  Lough  Esk. 
Donogh's  brother,  Dermot  O'Conor 
was  a  distinguished    captain  of  Con- 


naught  buonaghes  serving  in  Munster 
in  1600  with  1400  men,  and  'knoweth 
not  better  how  to  spend  his  time  than 
to  be  resident  where  he  gaineth  so 
much ;  is  grown  to  such  reputation 
that  he  could  bring  2000  more,  were  the 
Munster  chiefs  able  to  give  them  con- 
tent' Dermod  took  O'Sullevan  More 
prisoner  out  of  Munster ;  he  himself 
was  soon  after,  while  going  to  join  the 
English,  attacked  near  Gort  and  hanged 
by  Tibbot  na-Long. — Four  Masters  and 
Car.  CaL,  p.  401,  491. 

Dermot  had  married  the  sister  of 
Elizabeth's  Earl  of  Desmond. 

d  'O'Dowda  of  Tireragh  (Dathi  son  of 
Teig)  was  slain  by  one  of  the  queen's 
soldiers  in  one  of  his  own  castles  in 
Tireragh  of  the  Moy;  his  brother  Teig 
Buy  was  made  O'Dowda  by  O'Donnell 
in  1595 — they  were  7  brothers.  Dathi 
had  mar.  Miss  Lyons,  who  became  suc- 
cessively wife  of  O'Dowda,  of  Sir  L. 
Ghest,  of  Wm-  May  and  of  FitzMorrice 
FitzGerald.  Her  son  Dathi  O'Dowda 
was  ordered  to  be  brought  up  in  the 
English  religion  and  habits  by  Lionel 
Ghest.  Sir  R.  Musgrave,  in  his  narra- 
tive of  the  Irish  rebellions,  states,  that 
this  family  counted  25  castles  on  their 
lands,  "  and  they  have  a  burying  place 
appropriated  to  them  in  the  Abbey  of 


COUNT1E  OF  LEYTRIM. 


147 


cou'd  end  his  Suite,  O'Donnell  tooke  the  best  of  the  Countrie 
Prisoners  and  to  this  day  detaineth  them,  and  thereby  con- 
streyneth  their  followers  to  obey  him  at  his  pleasure,  all  the 
foresaid  Castles  be  in  O'Donnell's  hand  savinsf  Slieo  which  was 
demolished  by  O'Donell  4  years  ago,  and  since  not  re-edified. 


THE    COUNTIE    OF    LEYTRIM. 


This  Countie  was  erected  by  Sir  John  Perrott,3  beino- 
before  a  parcell  of  the  Countie  of  Sligo;  it  contayneth  all 
O'Rorkes     Countrieb     called     Breany    Ororke     also    part     of 


Moyne,  where  may  be  seen  the  gigantic 
bones  of  some  of  them,  who  have  been 
very  remarkable  for  their  great  stature, 
as  one  of  them  exceeded  seven  feet  in 
height."  Mac  Firbis  was  hereditary  his- 
torian to  O'Dowd,  held  the  rod  over 
O'Dowd  at  his  inauguration,  and  drank 
at  the  banquet  even  before  the  acknow- 
ledged senior  of  the  race.  Ciothruadh 
and  James  McFirbis  and  their  cousin 
John  Oge  built  the  Castle  of  Lecan  in 
Tireragh  in  1560.  Ciothruadh  had  a 
son  Ferfeasa.  In  1672  Duald  McFirbis, 
the  last  of  these  hereditary  antiquaries 
of  Lecan,  was  murdered.' — Hy-Fiach- 
rach,  p.  407. 

a  'An  Indenture  was  made  in  1585 
betwixte  Perrotte,  Lord  Deputy  Gene- 
rail  of  Ireland,  for  and  on  the  behaulfe 
of  the  Queene's  most  excellent  Majesty 
of  the  one  partye,  and  John,  bishop  of 
Kilmore — Lysaghe,  bishop  of  Ardaghe 


— SirBriane  O'Royrke  of  Dromahire,knt. 
— Cahall  McConnor — Carragh  Magran- 
nyll  of  Inishmurryne,  otherwise  called 
Magrannell  of  Moynishe,  chiefe  of  his 
name — Tirlaghe  McMolaghline  oge 
Magrannyll  of  Dromarde,  otherwise 
called  Magrannyle  of  Clonmologhlyne, 
chief  of  his  name — Tyrelaghe  Magaw- 
ryne  of  the  Largine,  chief  of  his  name — 
Teige  oge  Maglanchie  of  Rossclogher, 
chief  of  his  name — Owyne  McPhelline 
O'Royrke  of  the  Garre — Rory  McEnawe 
of  Inyshimylerye,  chiefe  of  his  name — 
Melaghlyne  McOwyne  McMurrye  of 
Loghmoyltagher — Farrell  McTernan  of 
Cloyloghe — Bryan  McLoghlyne  of  the 
Fayhee — Phelyne  Glasse  of  Clon- 
corycke — Wonye  MacSheane  O'Royrke 
of  Lloghnecouhye,  and  Tyernane 
O'Royrke  of  Dromahyre  of  the  other 
parte. 

b '  Wytnesseth,  that  wheare  the  whole 


148 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


McGwyres,  and  lying0  upon  the  West  part  of  Lough  Earne  and 
the  Countie  of  Moynterrolis  bordering  upon  the  Countie  of 
Longford  and  McSlenayesd  Country  near  Bundras  So  as  Leytrim 
hath  the  Countie  of  Sligo  to  the  North  the  Sheynen  to  the  West 
and  South-West,  the  Countie  of  Longford  South  and  part  of  the 
Countie  of  Cavan  to  the  East.  It  hath  neither  Townes  nor  Castles 
of  importance  but  such  as  be  raised  saving  the  Castle  of  Leytrim. 
This  O'Rorke6  is  the  base  Sone  of  the  last  Ororke  appre- 
hended in  Scotland  and  Executed  in  Ingland  who  ever  since  his 


territory  called  O'Royrk's  country,  com- 
prehendeth  Breny  O'Royrke,  both  the 
Moynteroly  es,  the  Largan,  Cowleovlyne, 
Kinaloghane  and  the  Dartry.' — lar- 
Connacht,  p.  346. 

c  '  McGuynies  landes  lyinge.' — Dym. 

d  '  MacGlanes  Cuntrie  lyinge  on  Bon- 
droies.' — Dymmock,  p.  20. 

eThis  O'  Rourke  was  Brian-na-Samh- 
thach,  or  Brian  Oge.  In  T590  he 
spoiled  everything  belonging  to  the 
English,  in  Leitrim,  when  his  father 
was  driven  out  of  his  territory.  In 
1591  his  father,  Brian-na-Murtha  O'R. 
was  hanged  in  London,  refusing  to  be 
tried  by  a  jury,  and  refusing  the  minis- 
trations of  the  Protestant  Archbishop 
of  Cashel,  who  was  a  pervert  priest. 
Sydney  had  pronounced  this  Brian- 
na-Murtha  the  '  proudest  man  that 
ever  he  dealt  with  in  Ireland.'  '  No  one 
of  his  tribe  for  a  long  time  excelled  him 
in  bounty,  hospitality,  in  giving  rewards 
for  panegyrical  poems,  and  in  sumptuous- 
ness,  in  numerous  troops,  in  comeliness, 
in  firmness,  in  maintaining  the  field  of 
battle.'    His  son  Brian  in  1 593  attacked 


Sir  G.  Bingham  of  Ballymote,  burned 
Ballymote,  and  thirteen  villages  around 
it.  In  1597  he  joined  O'Donnell 
and  helped  him  to  drive  back  the 
English  army.  In  1598,  being  annoyed 
with  O'Donnell  for  having  plundered 
O'Connor  Roe,  and  being  at  variance 
with  his  own  brother  Teig  about  the 
partition  of  their  territory,  O'Rourke 
formed  a  friendship  with  Clifford  and 
the  English.  But  soon,  on  account  of 
O'Donnell's  persuasion  and  threats  he 
joined  O'Donnell,  then  plundered 
Mullingar  and  all  around  it ;  and  made 
a  second  raid  on  that  country. — Four 
Masters.  On  the  15th  August  1599, 
he  defeated  at  the  Curlieus  1900  foot 
and  200  horse  who  were  led  by  the 
gallant  Sir  C.  Clifford.—  Tracts  relating 
to  Ireland,  Vol.  II.,  p.  47. 

He  went  to  Kinsale  with  O'Donnell 
in  1601.  He  died  at  Galway  in  1604, 
and  was  buried  in  Rosserilly.  He  was 
'  the  battle  prop  of  the  race  of  Aedh 
Finn,  the  star  of  valour  and  chivalry, 
the  brave  protecting  man  who  had  never 
suffered  Brefney  to  be  molested  in  his 


COUNTIE  OF  LEYTRIM. 


149 


his  Father's  Execution  hath  bene  a  Rebell,  saving  a  little  time 
this  last  Sommer  when  upon  a  discord  betwixt  him  and 
O'Donnel  fearing  Least  O'Donnell  should  rejectf  the  Lawful  Sone 
of  the  last  Ororke  to  be  Capten  of  the  Countrie  whom  he  hath  in 
Custody  and  so  displace  him,  he  submitted  himself  to  the  State, 
but  so  soon  as  that  controversie  was  composed  he  revolted  againe, 
and  since  hath  returned  a  great  Enemie  to  the  State,  Spoyling 
and  Wasting  Especially  the  Counties  of  Longford  and  West- 
meath;  he  is  able  to  make  of  his  owne  men  about  100  Horsemen 
and  about  300  Footmen. g 


time,  a  sedate  and  heroic  man,  kind  to 
friends,  fierce  to  foes.' — Four  Masters. 

f  Elect, rede.  In  1604,  Teig  O'Rourke 
only  legitimate  son  of  Sir  Bryan  O'R., 
got  a  grant  of  various  lordships  and 
manors  in  Leitrim.  This  Teige  was 
'  Lord  of  Breifny,  a  man  who  had  ex- 
perienced many  hardships  while  defend- 
ing his  patrimony  against  his  brother, 
Brian  Oge ;  a  man  who  was  not 
expected  to  die  on  his  bed,  but  by  the 
spear  or  sword  ;  a  man  who  had  fought 
many  difficult  battles,  and  encountered 
many  dangers  while  struggling  for  the 
dignity  of  his  father,  until  God  permit- 
ted him  to  obtain  the  Lordship,  died 
in  1605,  and  was  interred  in  the  Fran- 
ciscan Monastery  of  Carrigpatrick,  i.e. 
Dromahare.' — Four  Masters. 

In  1 60 1  Teig  was  sent  by  O'Neill 
with  800  men  into  Minister,  and  Red- 
mond Burke  with  600  men. 

s  According  to  the  Carew  MSS. 
O'Rourke's  forces  consisted  of  600  f. 
and  60  horse. 


The  territory  of  the  Magranails  or 
Reynolds  comprised  Mag-Rein  or  the 
southern  and  level  portion  of  the  Co. 
of  Leitrim.  The  late  Squire  Reynolds 
who  was  murdered  at  Sheemore  was  the 
last  head  of  this  family  ;  his  dau.  is  Mrs. 
M'Namara,  of  Lough-Scur  House. 

The  last  entry  in  the  Annals  of 
Loch  Ce  tells  us  that  in  the  year  1590 
'  a  Saxon  army  entered  Dartry,  or 
Maglancy's  country;  O'Rourke  and 
Maglancy  were  in  a  fortified  camp  in 
the  district  before  them ;  when  Mag- 
lancy was  leaving  O'Rourke's  camp,  his 
enemies  encountered  him,  viz.,  Mael- 
sechlain  Maglancy  and  another  part  of 
the  army  under  Maglancy;  and  they 
killed  him  and  eight  persons  with  him, 
and  his  head  was  sent  to  Athlone.'-- 
Annals  of  Loch  Ce. 

O'Rodachans  or  O'Rodys  were  Com- 
harbas  of  St.  Caillin  in  the  Church  of 
Fenagh  ;  they  had  several  remarkable 
relics  in  their  possession  before  Crom- 
well's time,  viz.,  bells,  sacred  standards, 


150 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO    1598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  ROSCOMAN. 

Roscoman3  contayneth  all  the  plaines  of  Conaught,  beginning 
at  the  Abbey  of  Boyle  nere  the  mountaines  of  the  Cirlewes 
and  Stretching  along  by  the  Sheynen  to  the  River  of  the  Suck. 
And  so  it  hath  the  Sheynen  to  the  East  and  South,  the  Countie 
of  Sligo  to  the  North,  and  the  Counties  of  Galloway  and  Maio 
to  the  West. 

This  Countie  is  under  the  Diocese  of  the  Bishop  of  Elfin, 
and  the  Townes  are  Roscomon,  re-edified  by  Sir  Nich.  Malbie 
and  the  ruined  Towne  of  Elfin.'1 


the  shrine  of  St.  Caillin.  A  very  re- 
markable bell,  called  Clog-na-righ  or 
Bell  of  the  Kings,  and  an  ancient 
vellum  MS.  are  still  preserved.  The 
Coarbs  or  Herenach  families  looked 
on  themselves  as  of  the  rank  of  gentle- 
man, and  not  mere  '  Antiquaryes.' 

O'Roddy  of  Crossfield,  hereditary 
comharb  of  Fenagh  Monastery,  was 
grandfather  of  Teig  O'Roddy,  who  was 
an  eminent  Irish  scholar  and  a  great 
patron  of  Irish  literature. — See  Irish 
Arch.  Miscellany,  p.  115. 

In  1696  were  attainted  the  O'Rourkes 
of  Galovrea,  of  Carnegreve,  of  Lallagh 
and  of  Dungebb,  all  in  Leitrim.  Several 
members  of  this  family  have  held  high 
command  in  the  armies  of  France, 
Austria  and  Russia.  In  Russia  there 
is  a  Prince  O'Rourke. — D' Alton's  Army 
List. 

*  A  Jury  finds  at  Roscommon  in 
the    year    1607    that — 'Roscommon 


extendeth  from  Athlone  to  Lahaghne- 
lahareebane,  near  and  on  this  side  of 
Beallanafadd,  33  miles,  and  from 
Beallaleige  at  the  river  of  Sheanon  to 
Owenmore,  near  Coystullath,  16  miles. 
.  .  .  Item  that  it  consisteth  of  fower 
barronyes  and  a  halfe,  viz.  Athlone, 
Rosscommon,  Boyle  alias  Moylagh 
(Moylurg)  and  the  half  barony  of  .  .  .' 
—far-Con.  pp.  353,  355. 

b  Terra  in  planiciem  plerumque  por- 
recta,  fertilis,  et  quae  numerosa  pascit 
armenta,  adhibitaque  mediocri  cultura 
fruges  benigne  producit  .  .  .  Sub 
Curlew  montibus  ad  Sineum  flumen  est 
Bar  onia  Boile  ubi  MacDermot  rerum 
potitur ;  ad  Succum  Baronia  Balin- 
Tobcr,  ubi  O'  Conor  Dun  plurimum 
potest,  cui  adjacet  Elphin,  sedes  Epis- 
copalis.  Inferiusest  Roscoman,  (J  Conor i 
Roo  Baronia,  in  qua  est  oppidum  pri- 
marium,  castro  olim  munitum,  sed 
aedificiis  culmeis  tectis ;   et  magis  ad 


COUNTIE  OF  ROSCOMAN. 


151 


The  Principall 

Castles   are: — Roscomon  I ,    ,  .     .,      ^ 

A  .,  ,  belonging  to  the  Ouene. 

Athloane    )   .        °    °  ^ 

St.  John's,  belonging  to  Mr.  Goodman. 

Balinesloe,  belonging  to  Capt.  Brabazon's  Sones. 


austrum  0 '  KeUiorum  Baronia,  Athlone, 
a  praecipuo  oppido  nominata,  quod 
suum  habet  castrum,  et  praesidia,  et 
pontem  e  vivo  saxo  pulcherrimum 
quern  Elizabetha  Regina  construendum 
curavit.' — Letter-press  affixed  to  Jans- 
sonius'  Ancient  Map  of  Connaught. 

'  The  country  is  of  excellent  soyle  ; 
under  O'Chonnor  Donne's  rule  are 
O'Byrne  and  Offlun  ;  under  O'Chonnor 
Roe  is  O'Flanigan  ;  under  MacDermot 
is  MacManus.' — Sydney's  Letters,  Vol. 
I.,  p.  104. 

It  was  divided  into  six  baronies 
in  1574,  viz.,  Muikarnayn — Shane  ne 
Moy  Brene,  O'Kelly  and  O'Naghten, 
chief  in  the  same;  Athloyne — O'Kelly, 
O'Fallon,  McCogh,  O'Murye  and  Mc 
Edmund,  chief;  Ballintubber — O'Con- 
nor Dun,  O'Flyn,  and  O'Flanigan, 
chief;  Manaster  Buille  —  McDermot, 
and  the  sept  of  Owen  M'Dermot,  chief; 
Tireone — O'Birne  and  O'Hanly,  chief; 
Roscommon  —  O'Connor  Roe  and 
O'Hanly,  chief.— Car.  Cat.  1601-1603, 

P-  475- 

'The  Lords,  Chieftains,  etc.,  of 
Moylurge,  alias  McDermott's  countrye 
O'Connor  Roe's  countrye,  and  O'Con- 
nor Dune's  countrye,'  who  in  1585 
came  to  an  agreement  with  Perrott, 
were — Hugh  O'Connor  of  Ballintobber, 


otherwise  called  O'Connor  Dune,  chiefe 
of  his  name  ;  Fergonanym  O'Hanley  of 
Knockensheigh,  chiefe  of  his  name ; 
Teig  M'Towmultagh  of  Croghan ; 
Towmultagh  Oge  of  Ballinkillen ; 
Towmultagh  M'Hugh  of  Dromehar- 
lagh ;  Oene  Ernney  of  .  .  .  Ferrall 
McDermonde  Roe,  chiefe  of  his  name  ; 
Connor  Oge  McDermod  of  the  .  .  . 
Taneste;  Cahall  Oge  McMulmory  of 
the  Eaden  ;  Mulmory  McDermod,  gald, 
chief  of  his  name  ;  Duwaltagh  McToolie 
O'Connor  of  Bracklone ;  Cahall  Mc 
Toolieof  Castlereagh;  Feagh  O'Ffloyne 
of  Sleavline,  chiefe  of  his  name  ;  Calloe 
O'Floyn  of  the  Cladaghe ;  Turrelagh 
Keaghe  McSwiny  Knocknetaghty;  Teig 
O'Connor  Roe,  chiefe  of  his  name ; 
Hugh  McTirrelagh  Roe  of  Clonybyrne ; 
Breene  O'Flanegan  of  Ballaoghter, 
chiefe  of  his  name ;  John  Crofton  of 
Canvoe  ;  ...  of  Ballingilly ;  Edward 
White  of  Ballinderry.' — far-Con.  p.  352. 
O'Connor  Dune  had  under  him 
O'Byrne,  O'Hanlie,  O'Fflynne,  etc.,  in 
the  barony  of  Ballintobber.  Teig 
Oge  O'Connor  Roe  had  under  him 
O'Flanegan,  McBrenan,  etc.,  in  the 
baroney  of  Roscommon ;  he  lived  in 
the  castle  of  Bealnemully ;  his  Tanest 
was  Hugh  McTirrelagh  Roe,  who  lived 
in  the  castle  of  Clonybirne.     Connor 


152 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Ballintabler,cAthleag,  belonging  to  the  H  eyres  of 
Sr  Nicholas  Lestrang-e  in  Suffolk  in  Insdand. 
Men  of  name : — 

The  Bishop  of  Elfin  Oconnor  dund 


Oge  McDermod,  mentioned  above 
as  Tanest,  lived  at  Incheaghochar. 
Theobald  Dillon  had  Carrowe-Riogh 
in  the  barony  of  Ballintobber  and 
Bally  McMoroghe  and  Bally-ne-shie  in 
the  barony  of  Boyle.  There  were  also 
Clifford  of  Calae  ;  Cavanaghe  of  New- 
town castle,  and  Morgan  of  Artagh. — ■ 
See  lar-Coti.  pp.  35 6,  357. 

c  Belonging  to  Sir  Hugh  O'Connor 
Donn.  Baile-an-tobair  or  Baile-tobair- 
Brighde,  in  the  barony  of  Castlereagh, 
was  taken  by  Sir  Edward  Fitton  in 
1571.  In  1581  O'Coinnegan,  an  emi- 
nent cleric  and  keeper  of  a  general 
house  of  guests,  wished  to  be  buried  at 
the  mound  of  Baile-an-Tobair.  '  Diar- 
maid  O'Connor  Donn,  the  man  who 
subdued  his  enemies  the  most,  and  who 
plundered  and  destroyed  his  adversaries 
the  most,  of  the  race  of  Turlogh  Mor 
O'Connor,  died  in  1587,  was  buried  in 
Baile-an-tobair,  under  the  protection  of 
God  and  Brigid,  after  he  had  been 
thirty-five  years  in  sovereignty.' — See 
Annals  of  Loch  Ce. 

d  Hugh,  9th  O'Connor  Donn,  mar.  a 
dau.  of  Bryan  na  Murta  O'Ruarc.  His 
eldest  son,  Charles,  mar.  a  dau.  of  Vis- 
count Bourke  of  Mayo.  His  son  Hugh 
of  Castlereagh  mar.  a  dau.  of  Lord 
Dillon  and  died  in  1635.  His  son, 
Captain  Bryan  Ruadh  of  Corrasduna, 


mar.  Mary,  dau.  of  O'Connor  Ruadh  of 
Castleruby.  There  is  nothing  remark- 
able concerning  O'Connor  Donn  in  the 
Carew  Calendar.  He  d.  in  his  Castle 
of  Ballintubber  in  1627. — See  Memoir 
of  the  O'Connors  by  Roderic  O'Con- 
nor, Esq.,  p.  62  and  80  ;  also,  Lineal 
Descent  of  the  O'Connors,  by  R. 
O'Connor,  Esq. 

The  Four  Masters,  p.  2145,  say  that 
the  famous  leader  of  Connaught  buo- 
naghes,  Dermot  0'Connor(son  of  Dual- 
tach  son  of  Tuathal),  was  '  a  gentleman 
of  the  house  of  O'Connor  Donn.'  But 
Archdall's  Lodge  says  he  was  a  brother 
of  O'Connor  Sligo,  and  brother-in-law 
of  Tibot-na-long. — Lodge,  vol.  iv.,  p. 
237.  We  have  given  an  account  of 
him  at  p.  146.  'O'Connor  Donn,  who 
had  been  for  a  long  time  imprisoned  by 
O'Donnell,  was  set  at  liberty  by  him 
on  the  4th  Dec.  1597,  after  having 
given  him  his  full  demand  ;  and  he 
solemnly  bound  himself  to  be  for  ever 
obedient  to  O'Donnell,  by  guarantees 
and  oaths  of  God  and  the  Church  ;  and 
he  also  delivered  up  to  him  as  hostages 
for  the  fulfilment  of  this,  his  own  two 
sons,  the  heir  of  O'Beirn,  the  eldest 
son  of  O'Hanly,  the  heir  of  O'Flynn, 
etc'  However,  O'Connor  Donn  was 
on  the  English  side  in  1598. — See  Four 
Masters,  pp.  2047  and  2125. 


COUNTIE  OF  ROSCOMAN. 


'53 


Oconnor  Roee 

McDermottf 

O'Birne8 


O'Flanegane 

0'Hanlieh 

O'Kellie1 


In  1597  Dubhaltach  O'C.  died. 
His  two  sons  Con  and  the  son  of  Der- 
mot  made  an  irruption  into  Glinske, 
the  castle  of  MacDavid,  and  took  preys  ; 
but  on  their  return  the  son  of  MacDavid 
defeated  them,  slew  Con  O'C.  and  Mul- 
rony  McDermott  and  many  other  gen- 
tlemen.— Four  Masters. 

'  Hugh  Mirgagh  O'Connor  of  Castle- 
ruby  was  nth  O'Connor  Ruadh  in 
1596.  He  is  ancestor  of  the  O'Connors 
of  Tomona  and  Ballagh  in  Roscommon. 
His  uncle  Teig  was  10th  O'Connor 
Roe,  was  M.P.  in  1585,  was  hanged  in 
1592,  and  his  sons  were  hanged  in 
1588  and  1595.  In  1616  a  jury  finds 
that  Hugh  Mirgagh  O'Connor  was 
seised  of  Castlerone,  Corneboy,  etc. 
Hugh's  brother  was  John  O'Connor  of 
Clonfree. — Memoir  of  the  O'Connors, 
Appendix,  p.  ix. ;  also  p.  79. 

Hugh  O'Connor  Roe  with  his  muster, 
and  McDermot  with  his  people  joined 
O'Donnell  in  his  raid  into  Clanrickard 
and  Thomond  in  1600  ;  and  in  1596 
they  joined  him  in  his  march  against 
General  Sir  J.  Norris.  However,  these 
chiefs  formed  'a  league  of  friendship' with 
Sir  Conyers  Clifford  in  that  year  1596  ; 
O'Donnell  in  consequence  plundered 
O'Connor  Roe's  territory  in  1597, 'al- 
though O'C.  Roe's  position  was  secure 
and  intricate,  and  he  had  near  him  a 
fastness,  into  which  he  could  send  his 


cattle,'  etc.  O'Donnell  took  all  the 
cattle  and  plundered  and  burned  all  his 
country. — Four  Masters,1^.  2195,  2003, 
2037. 

'  Teig  MTJermot,  chief  in  1585, 
being  too  old  to  attend  Parliament,  sent 
his  relative,  Bryan  of  Carrig  MacDer- 
mot,  to  represent  the  sept.  This  Bryan 
was  chief  in  1602  ;  his  wife  was  dau.  of 
O'Connor  Sligo.  Bryan  MTJermot  of 
Moylurg  d.  in  1592,  'and  there  was  no 
one  like  him  of  the  McDermots  to 
succeed  him  in  the  chieftainship.'  Conor 
McDermot  is  given  by  the  Four  Mas- 
ters as  chief  of  Moylurg  in  1596,  1597, 
and  1600.  In  1600  and  1601  McDer- 
mott  joined  O'Donnell  in  his  march 
against  General  Norris,  and  against  the 
English  at  Kinsale. — Four  Masters,  pp. 
2041,   2195,   2275. 

B  O'Beirne,  chief  of  O'Briuin-na-Sinna, 
a  beautiful  district  between  Jamestown 
and  Elphin.  Carbry  O'Beirne  was  chief 
in  1 585,  and  is  said  by  the  Four  Masters 
to  have  attended  Perrot's  Parliament. 
Mr.  O'Beirne,  of  Dangan-i-Beirne, 
possesses  some  of  the  old  property,  and 
is  head  of  the  race. — O'  Donovan. 

h  His  territory  comprised  the  parishes 
of  Kilglass,  Termonbarry,  Cloontuskert 
etc. —  O' Donovan's  Notes  to  Topog. 
Poem,  p.  xli. 

1  In  1585,  among  the  chieftains  in  the 
Roscommon  part  of  Imany  were  Hugh 

u 


154 

McGarrotk 

McEdmond' 

and  divers  freeholders 

of  ech  surname 
Henrie  Malbie 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Divers   of  the    Nugents,    and 

Tuits,  and  Dillons 
The  Heyres  of  Sir    Nicholas 
Strange    and    Capten     Bar- 
bazon. 

This  Countie  is  also  all  wastedm  that  Scarce  in  XX  Miles 
shall  a  House  be  seen  all  are  in  a  sort  Rebells  saving  Hugh 


O'Kelly  (otherwise  O  Kelly)  of  Liscal- 
hone  ;  and  Shane  ne  Moy  O'K.  of 
Criagh  (now  Creagh)  ;  Shane  O'Nagh- 
ten  of  Moynure  ;  Donogh  O'Murry  of 
Ballymurry,  and  Covaghe  O'Fallon  of 
Milltowne.  The  ruins  of  O'Fallon's 
castle  are  still  to  be  seen. — Hy-Many, 
p.  19. 

k  In  1585  lived  Connor  MacGeraghte, 
otherwise  called  MacGerraghte. 

In  1585  lived  Teig  McOwen  of 
Gallee,  otherwise  called  McEdmond. 
He  was  of  the  sept  of  O'Kelly  ;  his 
ancestor  William  O'Kelly  built  the  castle 
of  Gallee  or  Gaille  on  the  margin  of 
Lough  Ree,  where  it  still  stands. — See 
Ic7/--Co/i.,]>.^i8,  and  Hy-Many, pp.  103, 
1 04.  There  were  also  of  Gallee — Teig 
Colle  McConnor,  and  Ferdoragh 
McWilliam  Carragh. 

In  15S7,  obiit  Shane  O'Naghten, 
seisitus,  in  jure  Capitaneatus,  de  duobus 
quarteriis,  in  Les  Ffaes  de  Athlone, 
alias  O'Naghten's  cuntry.  Duo  quar- 
teria  sunt  in  occupatione  Connori 
O'Naghten  filii  antedicti  Joannis. 
O'Naghten  was  the  senior  of  all  the 
Hy-Many.  In  1604  a  grant  was  made 
to  Jane  ON.  (widow  of  Robert  O'N.  of 
Mynure  in  the  Fae"s,  Co.  of  Roscom- 


mon, killed  in  the  wars)  of  the  wardship 
of  John  O'N.,  son  and  heir  of  said 
Robert.  The  present  head  of  the  fa- 
mily is  E.  Naughton,  Esq.,  of  Thomas- 
town  Park  in  the  Faes.  Of  this  stock 
were  Baron  O'Naghten,  who  attended 
the  Prince  of  Hesse  Homburg  when  he 
married  Princess  Elizabeth. — Hy-Many, 
p.  176. 

m  In  1566  Sydney  wrote  Elizabeth — 
'We  passed  McDermott's  country, 
Occonnor  Roe's  country,  O'Connor 
Dune's  country,  and  encamped  near 
your  Majesty's  Castle  and  Monastery 
of  Roscommon,  leaving  for  twenty  miles 
of  length  as  fruitful  and  pleasant  a 
country  as  is  in  England  or  Ireland,  all 
utterly  waste  through  the  wars  of 
Occonnor Duneand Occonnor  Roe,  and 
we  suppose  the  breadth  to  be  equal  in 
manner  with  the  length  ;  which  Castle 
of  Roscommon,  as  we  perfectly  per- 
ceived and  were  surely  advertised,  was 
guarded  witha  ward  put  into  it  by  Occon- 
nor Dune  ;  nevertheless  they  offered 
us  no  injury  lying  by  them,  neither  were 
we  able  to  do  them  any.'— -Journal  of 
the  R.  Hist,  and  Arch.  Assoc,  of  Ireland, 
Jan.  1870,  p.  23. 


COUNTIE  OF   ROSCOMAN. 


155 


O'Connor  Roe"  but  there  is  neither  Inglysh  nor  Irysh  left  for  the 
rebell  or  Souldier  to  Spoyle  or  prey  upon. 


°  '  Roscomen  in  1597. — All  the 
Kellys  in  Imany  between  the  Suck  and 
the  Shannon  were  in  rebellion.  AVhen 
O'Donnell  came  into  the  country,  Fe- 
riogh  McHugh  O'Kelly  of  Moycarnan, 
and  the  Kellys  of  Twoaleagh  revolted  ; 
some  fled  to  the  North,  some  to 
O'Ruark's  country.  Donnell  O'K.  of 
Lysdallon,  Edmund  O'K.,  and  Donogh 
Baccho  O'K.  of  Culnegire,  Kedogh  O'K. 
of  Cloghin,  and  Redmond  O'Fallon  of 
Myltown  were  never  in  action.  O'Con- 
nor Roe,  O'Birne,  O'Hanly,  O'Flani- 
gan  were  in  action.  MacDermot  with 
150  followers  revolted  at  the  coming  of 
O'Donnell.  The  McDermot  Roes  live 
about  the  Abbey  of  Boyle  ;  but  their 
followers  are  in  action  with  O'Ruark. 
Con  McDwaltogh  O'Conor,  cousin-ger- 


main  to  O'Connor  Don,  pretending  to 
be  chief  of  that  name,  revolted  ;  he  was 
slain  in  action  by  Feagh  Boork,  son  of 
Sir  Hubert  MacDavy  Boork,  with  16 
others,  including  Mulrony  MacDer- 
mott.' — Car.  Cal.  1597,  p.  269. — Sir 
Conyers  Clifford's  Declaration. 

In  Roscommon  O'Connor  Dun, 
MacDermon,  O'Brien,  0'Hanlye,0'Fla- 
mergan,  the  MacSwynes,  MacHugh, 
Duff  Dalie,  O'Kellye  had  in  1599,  500 
foot  and  30  horse.  The  rebells'  forces 
in  all  Connaught  are  3090  foot  and  230 
horse. — Dymmok,  p.  28. 

The  Connaught  Fastnesses  were  '  The 
woods  and  boggs  of  Kilbigher ;  Killcal- 
lon,  in  MacWilliam's  contry;  Killaloa, 
in  the  county  of  Leitrim  ;  the  woods  and 
boggs  near  the  Corleas.' — Sir  G.  Carew. 


MOUNSTER. 

Mounster*  being  of  all  the  provinces  most  commodious  for 
the  Soyle,  Havens,  Rivers,  and  Townes  is  devided  into  the 
counties  of 

Waterford  Limerick 

Cork  Tipperarie 

Kerrie  and  Desmond 


"  In  the  Pacata  Hibernia,  published 
in  1633,  there  are  maps  of  Munster, 
Cahir,  Askeaton,  Glynn,  Carrigafoyle, 
Castle  Mang,  Limerick,  Limerick  Castle, 
Kinsale,  Hallibolyn,  Beare,  Dunboy, 
Castle-ni-Park,  Muskrey,  Cork,  and 
Youghal. 

Spencer  says  of  Ireland  and  specially 
of  Munster,  with  which  he  was  ac- 
quainted— '  And  sure  it  is  a  most  beau- 
tiful and  sweete  countrie.'  Sir  H. 
Sydney  wrote  in  1566 — '  I  have  known 
Munster  as  well  inhabited  as  many 
counties  are  in  England,  yet  a  man  may 
now  ride  40  miles  and  fynde  no  house 
standing  nor  any  manurance  of  the 
earth.' 

In  1584  the  towns  and  villages  were 
ruined  and  but  one  in  thirty  persons 
was  left  alive.  Desmond's  lands  were 
'  replenished  with  wood,  rivers,  and 
fishings.' — Sir  V.  Browne.  '  If  y'  honor 
did  vewe  the  commodious  havens  and 
harbours,  the  bewtie  and  commoditie 
of  ye  river  Shenan,  you  wd  say  that  you 
have  not  in  any  region  observed  places 


of  more  pleasure  nor  a  river  of  more 
commoditie  .  .  .  the  people  of  Munster 
be  the  most  docile  and  reformable  of  all 
others.' — Pelham's  Letter  in  15 So. 

'  The  Irish  did  account  Mounster  to 
be  the  Key  of  the  Kingdome,  both  by 
reason  of  the  Cities  and  walled  Townes 
(which  are  more  than  in  all  the  Island 
besides),  the  fruitfulnesse  of  the  Country 
being  reputed  the  Garden  of  Ireland, 
and  the  commodious  harbours  lying 
open  to  France  and  Spain.' — Pac.  Hib. 
p.  1,  Ed.  1633. 

On  23rd  Apr.  1600,  Mounster  is 
compared  by  Sir  H.  Power,  in  his 
report  to  Carew,  to  '  a  man  diseased 
of  a  languishing  and  incurable  sicknesse, 
the  Head  so  sore,  and  the  Heart  so 
sicke,  that  every  member  refuseth  his 
naturall  office  ;  it  was  never  more  dis- 
tempered. All  the  inhabitants  of  the 
countrey  are  in  actual  and  open  rebel- 
lion, except  some  few  of  the  better  sort, 
yet  even  all  their  tenants,  Friends, 
and  Followers,  yea,  for  the  most  part, 
either  their  Sonnes  or  Brothers,  pub- 


COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 


157 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 

Waterford  contayneth  all  the  Land  between  the  River  of  the 
Suer  which  falleth  into  the  Sea  beneath  Waterford  and  the  River 


lickly  professed  in  this  develish  action — 
as,  for  example,  the  Lord  of  Cahir,  Cor- 
mock  McDermond  Lord  of  Muskry, 
Gerald  Fitzjames  Lord  of  the  Decies, 
McCarthy  Keugh.  The  Rebells  are 
absolutely  Masters  of  the  field,  and  her 
Majesty's  Forces  here  garrisoned  in 
Cities  and  walled  Townes  were  in  con- 
dition little  better  than  besieged.  Fur- 
thermore the  Cities  and  walled  Townes 
are  so  besotted  and  bewitched  with 
Priests,  Jesuits  and  Seminaries,  that 
they  are  ready  upon  every  small  occa- 
sion to  rise  in  arms  against  our  soldiers, 
and  minister  all  underhand  ayde  and 
succour  unto  the  Rebells.' — Pac.  Hib. 

PP-  3i-  32- 

'  Nations  of  Munster  chiefly  noted 
as  procurers  of  mischief  : — The  MacSy- 
his,  MacSwynes,  and  the  Leries.  In 
Kerry  and  Desmond — the  Clantey 
McGagh,  and  the  Stacks,  saving  Morrice 
Stack  and  his  brothers.  They  are 
closely  allied  one  with  another.  Teig 
M'Owen's  sons  of  Drissane  are  noto- 
rious malefactors,  the  elder  Owen 
MTeig  excepted.  They  are  supported 
by  Cormac  McDermody  Lord  of  Mus- 
krie  ;  their  mother,  one  of  the  Swynes. 
O'Sulevan  More  and  O'Sulevan   Bere 


continue  faithful  subjects.  The  Knight 
of  Kerry,  Thomas  FitzMorris,  and  John 
O'Connor  Kerry,  "  sworn  to  one  ano- 
ther and  intended  to  become  subjects 
when  they  find  an  opportunity." 

'  Certain  men  sworn  to  continue  in 
rebellion — The  Lord  FitzMorris,  Tho- 
mas Oge  of  Ardnagreagh,  E.  Hussey  of 
Balynahowe,  Owen  McMoriartie  of 
Skart,  Cahir  McBrien  of  Traly,  Thomas 
Fitzjohn  of  Ballykely,  heir  of  Ballykely. 

'  Cormock  Oge  faithful;  CahirO'Kal- 
lahane  alias  Cahir  Modurhte,  dwelling 
by  Moaloe  to  be  maintained  in  his 
possessions,  at  least  till  these  rebellions 
be  assuaged — an  instrument  meet  to  be 
employed. 

'Trusted  instruments  in  Kerry — Moris 
Stack  and  his  brothers,  John  Rice, 
Donel  Faries,  Richard  Rice. 

'  To  be  trusted  in  Cork — Cormock 
Oge  and  his  brother  Teig,  Miles  Roch, 
James  Nagle  and  his  kinsmen,  W.  Ma- 
lafont,  Patrick  Miagh  of  Kinsale,  T. 
Fleming  of  Belguolan,  Cormock  Daly, 
Moris  Roch,  Cahir  McDonoghe.' — 
Car.  Cal.  year  1596. 

'The  provincial  rebels  are  no  less  than 
7000  able  weaponed  men.  Florence 
McCarthy,  by  his  friends  and  followers, 


158 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


of  Youghall  called  the  great  Water  and  includeth  the  Mountain 
Countrie  called  the  Deciesa  the  Bishoprick  of  Lismoore  ad- 
joining to  the  whit  Knights  Countrie  Called  Clongibbon.  So 
hath  it  the  Sea  to  the  East  Suer  to  the  North  part  of  the  Coun- 
ties of  Tipperarie  and  Limerick  to  the  West,  the  great  Water 
and  part  of  the  Countie  of  Cork  to  the  South. 


will  be  the  strongest  and  of  greatest 
force  of  any  Traitor  in  Munster ;  in  so 
much  that  1500  of  her  Majesty's  forces 
must  of  necessity  be  employed  against 
him  ! 

'  The  entire  province  was  disaffected ; 
with  sufficient  worldy  wisdom  the  great 
Lords  continued  subjects  in  show,  but 
their  followers  were  in  action  with  Fitz- 
Thomas  ;  the  walled  towns  were  cor- 
rupted; and  the  open  country  was  wholly 
in  the  possession  of  the  Geraldines 
and  shut  against  the  Queen's  loyal  sub- 
jects. 

'  Wee  can  neither  looke,  nor  hope  for 
any  assistaunce  from  the  Lords  of  the 
countreys,  who  are  onely  in  personal 
shewes  subjects,  as  the  Lo.  Power,  the 
Loi  of  Dunboyne,  Lo:  Roche  the  Lo 
of  Cahir,  Cormac  M'Dermott  chief  of 
Muskerry.  McCharty  Reough  chief  of 
Carrebry,  Garrald  Fitz  James  chief  of 
the  Deasyes,  Patrick  Condon,  O'Cal- 
loughan,  and  all  others  (except  the  Lo 
Barry  who  of  late  hath  don  good  service) 
being  assured  from  the  rest  to  receive 
no  ayde  for  her  Matie  with  their  forces, 
the  most  of  them  having  either  their 
brothers  or  next  kinsmen  in  actuall 
rebellion.  Florence  McCartie  (if  he 
continue  in  this  disloyall  course,  wch  he 


hath  begonn,  (whereof  as  yet  we  have 
no  other  hope)  by  his  friends  namely, 
both  the  O'Sulyvans,  McFynnen,  the 
Carties  of  Desmond,  O'Donnevan, 
O'Crowly,  O'Mahon  Carbrey,  O'Mahon 
Fin,  sundry  of  theSeptesof  the  Carthies 
of  Carbery,  the  McSwynes,  most  of  the 
Carties  of  Muskerry,  all  the  Carties  of 
Dowallo,  O'Keefe,  McAwlye,  and  many 
of  the  O'Callaghans  with  his  and  their 
followers  and  kinsmen  who  before  weare 
better  disposed  by  their  outward  affec- 
tions, will  be  the  strongest,  and  of 
greatest  force  of  any  traytor  in  Moun- 
ster  ;  in  so  much  that  1500  of  her  Mats 
forces  must  of  necessitie  be  employed 
against  him.' — Lifeof  Florence  M'Carthy 
Mbr,  pp.  249,   259,  260. 

'  The  Munster  people  are  Spanish  in 
heart,  Popish  in  religion,  and  infinitely 
discontented.  If  the  gentlemen  could 
agree  upon  a  leader,  they  would  declare 
themselves  in  action.' — Car.  Cal. 

a  '  Called  the  Denes,  the  Bishoprick 
of  Rismore  united  to  the  sea  of  Water- 
ford,  Prendergast's  lande,  who  was  one 
of  the  first  conquest  and  a  most  famous 
capten.  The  White  Knightes  cuntry 
called  Clangibbon.'—  Dym.  O'Brics, 
O'Felans,  and  Fitzgeralds,  were  suc- 
cessively lords  of  the  Deisi. 


COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 


'59 


It  hath  Castles 
and  Townes 


Waterfordb 
Lismore 
Dungarvanb 
Clonmellc 
The  Bishop  of  Waterford  and   Lismored 


b  '  Waterford  and  Dungarvan  full  of 
trafique  with  England,  France  and  Spain, 
by  means  of  their  excellent  good  haven.' 
—  Campion. 

'  Waterford  is  properly  builded,  and 
very  well  compact,  somewhat  close  by 
reason  of  their  thick  buildings  and  nar- 
row streets.     The  citizens  through  the 
intercourse   of  foreign  trafic  in   short 
space  attaine  to  abundance  of  wealth. 
The  soil  about  it  is  not  all  of  the  best, 
by  reason  of  which  the  aire  is  not  very 
subtile  ;  yea  nathelesse  the  sharpness 
of  their  wittes  seemeth  to  be  nothing 
dulled  by  reason  of  the  grossenesse  of 
the  air.     They  are,  as  students,  preg- 
nant in  conceiving,  quick  in  taking,  and 
sure  in  keeping  ;  very  heedie  and  warie, 
loving  to  looke  before  they  leape,  cheer- 
ful in  their  entertainment  of  strangers, 
hearty  one  to  another,  nothing  given  to 
factions.  They  love  no  idle  benchwhis- 
tlers  nor  luskish  faitors.     The  men  are 
addicted  to  trafick,  the  women  to  spin- 
ning and  carding.     As  they  distil  the 
best  Aqua  vitag,  so  they  spin  the  choic- 
est rug  in  Ireland.  The  citie  was  never 
dusked  with  the  least  freckle  of  treason, 
and  therefore  the  city's  arms  are  decked 
with  the  words  '  Urbs  Intacta? — Sta- 
nikurst,  p.  24,  Ed.  1586. 


In  1583  the  militia  of  Waterford 
consisted  of  300  shot  and  300  billmen, 
that  of  Clonmel  40  shot  and  zoobillmen, 
that  of  the  barony  of  Decies  20  shot  and 
200  billmen. — Cox,  Hib.  Anglicana. 

c  In  1600  Whyte,  a  lawyer,  was  elec- 
ted sovereign  and  was  as  much  Romish 
as  any  of  the  other  magistrates  of  Mun- 
ster   towns.     Father   Thomas   Whyte, 
S.J.,  a  native  of  Clonmel,  was  founder 
of  the  Irish  College  of  Salamanca,  and 
was   its    Rector   in    1602. —  Car.    Cat. 
'Clonmel  a  well  built  and  well-kept  town 
upon  the  river  of  Sure,  is  more  haunted 
of  Jesuits  and  priests  than  any  other 
towne  or  city  within  this  province,  which 
is  the  cause  we  found  the  burgesses  here 
more    obstinate   than  elsewhere.     For 
when    the  Lord   President  did  gently 
offer  to  the  principal  inhabitants  that  he 
would  spare  to  proceed  against  them 
then,  if  they  would  yield  to  conference 
for  a  time,  and  become  bound  in  the 
meantime  not  to  receive  any  Jesuit  or 
priest  into  their  houses,  they  peremp- 
torily refused.' —  Sir  J.  Davys  in    Car. 
Cat.  an.  1606,  p.  475. 

d  Vide  infra  The  Bishops ;  this  was 
Mulmury,  or  Myler  McGrath,  who  was 
Archbishop  of  Cashel. 


i6o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Vid  Analect 
Catholic,  in 
Hiber. 
2nd  edit.  161 7 
P.  68  For  an 
Account  of  the 
penitent  death 
of  this  chief 
Justice/ 


Chief  men  The  L.  Power6  baron  of  Carroughmore 
Sir  Nicholas  Walshe*  chief  Justice  of 

the  common  Pleas. 
The  H  eyres  of  Fitzgerrald  Late  Vis- 
count of  Derieg  and  Baron  of  Dro- 
man. 


'Vide  infra  The  Peers.  '  Only  in 
personal  shows  a  subject.' 

fTunc  mortuus  est  Nicholaus  Valois, 
insignis  haereticorum  in  Ibernia  judex, 
qui  quod  se  haereticum,  et  in  Ibernos 
saevum  ostenderit,  apud  Anglos 
magnum  dignitatis  locum  obtinuit. 
Senescens,  appropinquantemque  mor- 
tem timens,  Catholicae  ecclesiae  mise- 
ricordiam  implorando  impetrat. — O'Su- 
levan  Beare,  Hist.  p.  333,  Ed.  Kelly. 

g  Recte  Decies.  '  The  Lord  of  Desies, 
James,  son  of  Gerald,  son  of  John,  son 
of  Gerot  Mdr  of  Desies,  son  of  James, 
son  of  Gerot  Earl  of  Desmond,  died  in 
1 58 1.' — Four  Masters.  'Gerald  Fitz- 
James,  Chief  of  the  Deasyes  only  in 
personal  shows  a  subject.' — Car.  Cal. 
an.  1600.  'Mrs.  Alyson  Dalton 
petitions  the  Queen  in  1600,  says 
she  is  a  poor  widow  with  eight 
orphans,  driven  out  of  Ireland,  had 
defended  her  castle  of  Knockmoan 
for  two  years  at  her  own  charge,  prays 
to  be  allowed  20  warders  and  4  horse- 
men in  the  Queen's  pay.  Garret  Fitz 
James,    her    spiteful    neighbour,    was 


bound  in  ^500  for  the  loyalty  of  his 
base  brother,  Thomas  Fitzjames,  to 
whom  was  committed  her  castle  of  Cap- 
poquin,  but  he  treacherously  razed  the 
castle,  whereby  said  bond  is  forfeited.' 
The  Privy  Council  decide  that  the  de- 
mand about  the  forfeiture  of  the  bond 
may  be  granted  when  the  country  is 
reduced  to  obedience. —  Car.  Cal.  year 
1600.  p.  396.  In  1600,  Elizabeth's  Earl 
of  Desmond  writes  to  Cecil  that  '  the 
Lord  of  the  Decis'  came  to  him.  Sir 
Gerald  FitzGerald  Lord  of  Decies  died 
in  1553,  seized  in  fee  of  the  baronies 
of  Curraghmore,  Rosmire  and  Ath- 
meane,  the  manor  of  Dromanagh,  the 
mountain  and  castle  of  Slygan,  and  the 
Grange  in  Old  Parish,  in  all  over  4000 
acres.  His  grandson,  Gerald  Fitzjames, 
mentioned  above,  was  son  of  Sir  James 
Lord  of  Decies  and  Elena,  dau.  of 
McCarthy  Reagh.  He  mar.  Ist  a  dau. 
of  Lord  Poer,  2ly  a  dau.  of  Lord  Barry. 
Dying  without  issue  he  was  succeeded 
by  his  cousin,  John  FitzGerod  Gerald, 
whose  mother  was  dau.  of  Butler  of 
Derryloskan.  Sir  John  by  a  dau.  of  the 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 


161 


Divers  other 
Howses  of 


Powers'1 

Wises' 

Aylewardsk 


White  Knight  was  father  of  John  Oge 
who  was  aged  18  in  1598.  John  Oge's 
son  was  'brought  up  in  piety'  by  the  fa- 
mous Colonel  Sankey,  mar.  a  dau.  of 
Lord  Power,  and  then  a  dau.  of  the 
Earl  of  Clancartie.  He  had  no  son ; 
his  daughter's  son,  Earl  Grandison,  put 
an  inscription  on  his  tomb  in  the  church 
at  Youghal. 

h  'The  prisoners  in  Waterford  jail  for 
the  most  part  were  natives  of  that  shire, 
of  which  there  were  very  few  that  were 
not  bastard  imps  of  the  Poores  and 
Geraldines  of  the  Decies,  which  two 
septs  do  overspread  all  that  county.' 
— Sir  J.  Davys  in  1606,  Car.  Cat. 

There  were  Power  of  Culefin,  P.  of 
Culroe,  P.  of  Balinecurry. — ArchdalPs 
Lodge,  Ed.  1789,  vol.  ii.,  p.  305. 

'  Powers  Country  may  be  well  com- 
pared with  the  best  ordered  country  in 
the  English  Pale.' — Sir  H.  Sydney's 
Letter,  27th  Feb.  1575. 

James  Wyse,  of  the  Manor  of  St. 
John,  died  in  1596.  His  son,  John, 
was  26  years  old  in  1598  ;  his  son 
Thomas  was  Mayor,  and  Nicholas,  She- 
riff of  Waterford  in  1605.  Of  this 
family  was  M.  Wise,  S.J.  In  the 
Franciscan  Monastery  is  the  tomb  of 
Thomas  Wise  and  Mabelle  Walshe, 
'  Religione  ac  pietate,  necnon  in  pau- 
peres  charitateconspicuorum.'  Thomas 
Wise  died  in  1604. 

k  Aylward's   castle   of  Fatlock  was 


Walshes' 

Maddonsm 

Waddings" 

beautifully  situated  near  Passage.  John 
Aylward  had  known  Cromwell  in  Lon- 
don, and  was  informed  by  him  that  his 
castle  would  be  spared  if  he  would  pre- 
tend conformity  in  religion  ;  Aylward 
held  his  faith,  and  lost  his  castle  by 
siege. — Ryland,  p.  7  2.  In  John's  Street 
is  an  ancient  spacious  house  belonging 
to  Sir  Peter  Aylward's  family,  over  the 
chimney-piece  of  which,  in  the  great 
room,  the  family  arms  are  curiously  cut 
in  stone ;  they  are  also  cut  on  each  side 
of  the  street  gate. 

1  The  Walshes  were  Mayors  in  1407, 
1578,  1 60 1,  1602,  and  at  other  times. 
Pilltown  was  the  estate  of  the  W. ;  there 
Judge  VV.  lived,  the  supposed  author 
of  the  forged  commission  in  favour  of 
the  Irish  in  Charles  the  First's  time. 
The  Holy  Ghost  Hospital  was  founded 
in  1545  by  Patrick  Walsh,  '  in  order 
that  the  master,  brethren,  and  the  pool 
may  pray  for  our  prosperity  while  we 
live,  and  for  our  souls  when  we  shall 
depart  this  life,  and  for  the  souls  of  all 
our  progenitors,  and  for  the  prosperity 
of  said  hospital,  and  for  the  soul  of 
Patrick  Walsh,  and  for  the  prosperity 
of  Catherine  Sherlock  his  wife,  and  for 
her  soul  and  for  the  souls  of  all  the 
faithful.' — Ryland,  p.  190. 

m  Richard  Madan  was  Mayor  in  1599; 
James  M.  in  1583  ;  William  M.  in  1380. 

n  Thomas  Wadding  was  Mayor  in 
1596.     '  He  holds  a  chief  office  under 


l62 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I59S. 


Sherlocks0 

Prendergrassesp 

Geraldinesq 

the  Crown  in  the  Co.  of  Waterford,  and 
dwells  in  that  city,  a  busy  fellow  inclined 
to  breed  dissension,  allied  in  these 
parts.'—  Carew  MSS.  608.  'The 
Mayor  of  Waterford,  which  is  a  great 
lawyer,  one  Wadding,  carrieth  the 
sword  and  rod,  as  I  think  he  should  do, 
for  her  Majesty  ;  but  he  nor  his  sheriffs 
never  came  to  church  sithence  he  was 
mayor  nor  sithence  this  reign,  nor  none 
of  the  citizens  men  nor  women  nor  in 
any  town  or  city  throughout  this  pro- 
vince.'— Letter  written  by  Dr.  Lyon  in 
1596. 

Thomas  W.  mar.  Mary  Walsh,  and 
had  three  most  distinguished  sons, 
Jesuits — Peter,  Professor  of  Divinity  at 
Louvain,  Antwerp,  Prague,  and  Gratz, 
and  Chancellor  of  the  Universities  of 
Prague  and  Gratz,  and  author  of  several 
books  ;  Michael,  a  distinguished  Pro- 
fessor of  Theology,  Rector  of  the  Se- 
minary of  St.  Jerome,  Puebla,  of  the 
College  of  St.  Ildefonse.  Mexico,  of  the 
College  of  Guatemala,  of  the  College  of 
St.  Ildefonse,  Puebla,  renowned  for 
learning  and  sanctity;  he  wrote  a  re- 
markable work  on  ascetic  Theology  ; 
Luke,  a  Professor  of  great  fame  in  Spain, 
consulting  Theologian  of  the  Inquisition, 
Lecturer  on  Jurisprudence  in  Madrid, 
etc.,  '  quern  sit  minis  aequifarare  fossis,' 
as  a  Spanish  writer  says  of  him. 

Thomas'  brother,  Walter  Wadding, 
had  two  celebrated  sons — Ambrose,  a 


Nugentsr 
Whytes5 
Mandevils' 

Jesuit  Professor  in  the  University  of 
Dilingen,  and  Luke,  the  great  Francis- 
can. Their  kinsman  Richard  W.,  an 
Augustinian,  was  a  famous  professor  in 
Coimbra,  and  their  cousins,  Paul  Sher- 
lock, S.J.,  and  Dr.  French  of  Ferns,  were 
men  of  great  name. — See  Harold's  Life 
of  Luke  Wadding,  and  De  La  Requerds 
Memoir  of  Michael  Wadding,  S.J. 

0  The  Sherlocks  filled  the  office  of 
Mayor  in  1462,  and  often  afterwards. 
Paul  S.  was  Mayor  in  1594  ;  John  S.  in 
1606  ;  and  Walter  in  1614. 

p  The  Prendergasts,  I  believe,  were 
of  Tipperary  ;  they  are  given  in  Smith's 
List  as  of  Waterford. 

q  FitzGerald  of  Femane. 

'  Nugent  of  Cloncoskeran  Castle. 

"  John  White  was  Mayor  in  1414  ; 
Thomas  W.  was  Mayor  in  1598.  In  the 
cathedral,  on  a  flat  stone,  are  the  words 
'  Hie  jacent  Patricius  White  filius  Jo- 
hannis,  quondam  civis  Civitatis  Water- 
fordiae,  qui  obiit,  et  Anastacia  Grant, 
ejus  uxor,  quae  obiit  x.  die  Octobris 
a.d.  1592.'  Thomas  W.  of  Clonmel,  a 
Jesuit,  was  Rector  of  Salamanca  at  this 
time  ;  he  was  the  first  to  found  an  Irish 
College  on  the  Continent.  Stephen  W. 
of  Clonmel,  who  afterwards  became  one 
of  the  most  learned  men  in  Europe,  was 
a  Jesuit  novice  in  1598.  See  a  memoir 
of  him  by  Dr.  Reeves,  and  another  by 
the  Bollandist,  Pere  de  Buck. 

1  In  the  time  of  Edw.  IV.  there  was 


COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 


163 


Condemns" 
Craghes" 


Brownesw 

Dobins* 

Leasy  and  Lees' 


a  grant  from  T.  Mandeville  and  Anas- 
tace  his  wife  to  Earl  Maurice  of  Des- 
mond.— Car.  Cal.  1589-1600  p.  104. 

I  find  no  men  tion  of  this  name  in  Smith 
or  Ryland,  except  in  this  passage  of 
Smith  : — '  The  principal  inhabitants  of 
the  county  in  the  reign  of  Elizabeth 
were  the  Aylwards,  Browns,  O'Briens, 
Bracks,  Bourks,  Condons,  Creaghs, 
O'Connerys,  Daltons,  Dobbins,  Eve- 
rards,  FitzGarretsorFitzGeralds,  O'Feo- 
lains,  FitzTheobalds,  Leas  or  Leaths, 
Maddens,  Mandeiuls,  Merrifields,  Mor- 
gans, O'Maghers,  M'Henricks,  Nugents, 
Osbornes,  Poers,  Prendergasts,  Roch- 
fords,Sherlocks,Tobins,  Walls,  Walshes, 
Waddings,  Wyses,  Whites,  etc'  There 
were  a  captain,  a  lieutenant,  and  an 
ensign  named  Mandeville  in  Butler's 
Regiment. — See  King Jamef  Army  List. 
"  Ryland  states  that  '  a  family  of  the 
Co.  of  Waterford  assumed,  with  unac- 
countable reluctance,  the  name  of  Con- 
don in  place  of  MacMajoke.' 

*  In  the  parish  of  Modeligo  are  the 
remains  of  some  ancient  castles  of  the 
Magraths.  The  castle  of  Sledy  was 
built  in  1628  by  Philip  McGrath,  as 
appears  from  a  date  on  a  chimney-piece 
with  the  words  '  Philippus  McGrath.' 
In  the  Abbey  of  Dungarvan  is  a  tomb- 
stone with  the  inscription,  '  Donald 
McGrath  1400.'  The  castle  near  Dun- 
garvan belonged  to  this  family ;  the 
Abbey  was  founded  by  them  also.  The 


only  old  monument  of  the  church  of 
Lismore  which  has  escaped  the  ravages 
of  time,  is  their  highly  ornamented  tomb, 
with  an  inscription  that  can  be  only 
partially  deciphered — 'Johes  McGrath 
.  .  .  uxor.  .  .  Katherina Thorne.  1548.' 
There  was  a  Daniel  McGrath,  Esq.,  of 
Mountain  Castle,  whose  dau.  married 
one  of  the  Powers  of  Curraghmore. — 
See  Lodge,  vol.  ii.  p.  306. 

w  M.  Browne  was  Mayor  in  161 2. 
In  the  Franciscan  Monastery  is  a  tomb 
with  the  inscription  '  Hie  jacet  Robertas 
Lincol filius  Gulielmi  civis  civitatis  Wa- 
ter for  diae,  qui  obiit  A.D.  1630,  et  uxor 
ejus  Margarita  Browne  quae  obiit ..." 
The  inscription  on  the  Rice  monument 
shows  that  Rice's  wife  was  Catherine 
Browne.  Rice  was  six  times  Mayor 
from  1471  to  1488.  Ignatius  Browne, 
a  distinguished  Jesuit,  who  founded  the 
Irish  College  of  Poictiers,  was  born  in 
Waterford  in  1630. 

1  Laurence  Dobbyn  was  Mayor  in 
1460,  and  Patrick  D.  in  1589.  Whit- 
fieldstown  Castle  was  the  seat  of  W. 
Dobbin  at  the  time  of  Petty's  survey. 

y  Laurence  Lea  of  Waterford  became 
a  Jesuit  in  1604.  N.  Lee  was  Sheriff 
in  1575  and  1580. 

z  Perhaps  this  should  be  Tews.  Under 
the  tower  in  the  Franciscan  Friary  is  a 
highly  laboured  monument  with  the  in- 
scription, tHicjacent  Johannes  Tew,  filius 
.  quondam  civis  civitatis  Waterford, 


164 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Chief    \  Dongarvan,aa  the  queries 
Castles  j  The  hookebb 


qui  obiit  1597  .  .  .  ejus  uxor  .  .  .  1599.' 
The  following  inscriptions  in  the  Friary 
give  names  omitted  in  our  MS.—'  Hie 
jacet  Johannes  Skydye,  civis  quondam  et 
Major  hujus  civitatis  Waterfordiae  qui 
obiit  1 64 1,  et  Johanna  Whiteejus  uxor  .  .  . 
Hie  jacet  Franciseus  Lumbard  filius 
Nicolai  .  .  .  obiit  A.D.  1590,  et  Katerina 
Walshe,  uxor  ejus,  quorum  Animabus 
propitictur  Deus.  Amen.'  There  is 
also  a  tombstone  highly  decorated  of 
Agnes  Lumbard,  wifeof  Edward  Walshe; 
of  Thomas  Meyler  and  his  wife  Isabella 
Walsh  '  re/igionepe .  .  .  aepietatenon  pau- 
peres.'  J.  Tew  and  Patrick  Meyler 
were  Sheriffs  about  this  time.  The  first 
Mayor  of  Waterford  was  W.  Lumbard, 
m  J377  ;  J-  Lumbard  was  Mayor  in 
1603.  Dr.  Peter  Lombard  was  a  theo- 
logian of  European  reputation,  and  was 
made  Primate  of  Armagh  in  1601.  He 
was  born  in  Waterford  in  1554;  his 
family,  closely  allied  to  the  Whites  and 
Waddings,  gave  many  bright  ornaments 
to  both  Church  and  State.  He  was 
educated  by  the  famous  Rev.  Peter  White 
of  Waterford,  called  '  the  happy  school- 
master,' on  account  of  his  marvellous 
success  in  teaching. — See  Lombard's 
De  Regno  Hiberniae  Commentarius, 
edited  by  Dr.  Moran,  p.  v. 

In  the  churchyard  of  Newcastle,  near 
Tramore,  is  the  tomb  of  Ronan  of  Hac- 
ketstown,  a  celebrated  doctor  who  d. 
in  1626,  and  of  his  wife  Anastatia  De- 
vereux,  who  d-  in  16 14.    In  Carrickbeg 


is  a  monument  to  Giraldus  Wale  de 
Cuilmuck — nobilis,  Caterina  Comeford; 
these  Wales  lived  in  the  castle  of  Cool- 
namuck,  which  is  still  possessed  by  the 
family.  A  Jesuit  named  Walter  Wale 
lived  in  1598.  At  Churchtown  is  the 
inscription,  'Hcrelieth.  IHS.  oneBoutlr. 
Fis.  Gerott.  of  Bolendisert.  And  His  Wif. 
Johan.  Fis.  Richads.  Ano.  1587.' 

Add  Hore  of  Shandon,  whose  de- 
scendant Colonel  Hore  was  M.P.  for 
Waterford  in  1689,  when  two  others  of 
thefamily  were  members  for  Dungarvan. 
In  the  '  French  Church '  is  the  old 
monument  of  Michael  Hore,  merchant 
of  Waterford  ;  also  a  monument  to  M 
Grant,  who  d.  in  1626.  T.  Grant  was 
Sheriff  in  1546;  Matthew  Grant  was 
Mayor  in  1640. 

There  was  a  respectable  family  named 
Gough  of  Kilmanahan  ;  N.  Gough  was 
Mayor  in  1435  an(i  I44I>  ar>d  Sir  Ed- 
ward Gough  in  1600.  Members  of  the 
family  of  Strong  were  Mayors  in  1431, 

1434,  1485,  i56°,  *S*1,  ^S8-  Paul 
Strong  was  Mayor  in  1597  ;  in  1607 
Tho.  Strong  was  Mayor  and  Rob.  Strong 
Sheriff.  Among  the  Waterford  gentle- 
men in  1592  was  '  Eu.  Roche.' — Car. 
Cat.  A.  Briver  was  Mayor  in  1587  ; 
and  a  namesake  of  his  was  a  Jesuit. 
Patrick  Morgan  was  Mayor  in  1593, 
and  there  was  a  Waterford  Jesuit  of  that 
name,  about  that  time. 

™  A  very  strong  castle. —  Camden. 

bb  Perhaps  Crook,  near  Passage,  which 


COUNTIE  OF  WATERFORD. 


165 


Moncollopcc 
Kilmanahimdd 
KilmcThomasee 
Ardmoreff 


Cloveyhh 
Dermebeer" 
Domanokk 
Carraehmore" 


The  passage  a  foot  at  the  mouth  of  the  River 
Piltongg  Cappahunmm 


had  belonged  to  the  Knights  of  St. 
John,  and  in  1565  belonged  to  A. 
Power. 

cc  Macollop  consists  of  a  large  round 
tower,  and  several  square  towers  flank- 
ing its  intermediate  base  ;  it  was  made 
a  ruin  by  Cromwell  in  1640. — Par/lam. 
Gazetteer  of  Ireland. 

dd  Opposite  Knocklofty. 

ee  Belonging  to  Power,  in  whose  de- 
scendants the  surrounding  property  is 
still  vested. 

"  "  Urbem  Lissimorpertransit  flumen 
Avenmor,  Ardmor  cernit  ubi  concitus 
aequor  adit." — Necham,  quoted  by  Cam- 
den. 

Smith  in  1774  wrote  that  there  was 
'  the  stump  of  a  castle,  and  not  long 
since  was  a  much  larger  one  there, 
which  was  taken  down.'  A  family 
named  Mirnen  had  property  here  from 
the  year  1197  to  1745,  when  they  sold 
it. — Smith,  p.  49.  '  The  Mirnyneswere 
remarkable  for  their  longevity,  enjoyed 
an  estate  often  pounds  a  year  conveyed 
to  them  by  4  lives  above  these  400 
years,  notwithstanding  the  Insurrections, 
etc.  They  never  changed  their  name  ; 
once  only  wanted  one  heir  in  a  direct 
line,  which  was  supplied  by  a  colla- 
teral branch.      It  is  said  the  present 


possessor,  being  80  years  old,  never  saw 
Youghal  nor  any  other  town,  nor  will  be 
courted  to  it.' — Dynelys  Tour  in  1687. 

Rg  Belonging  to  the  Walsh  family. 

hh  Clonea  or  Clough.  Clonea,  a  castle 
of  the  FitzGeralds  of  Decies,  is  one  of 
the  most  perfect  specimens  of  the  forti- 
fied residence.  Clough  was  built  before 
the  invention  of  firearms  ;  it  is  called  in 
Gougk's  Camden  an  ancient  square 
castle. 

"  Perhaps  Darinlar  Castle,  which 
stands  on  the  land  of  the  Earl  of  Glen- 
gall,  '  a  tower  protected  by  four  circular 
castles,  that  projected  beyond  the  cur- 
tain.'— Pari.  Gaz.  of  Ireland. 

kk  The  Lord  of  Decies  owned  Dro- 
mana  ;  he  was  descended  from  the  7  th 
Earl  of  Desmond.  In  1561  FitzGerald 
of  Dromana  became  Baron  of  Dromany 
and  Viscount  Desses.  When  he  died 
without  issue,  his  brother,  Sir  James 
FitzGerald  of  Cappagh,  came  to  live  at 
Dromana  ;  Lord  Stuart  de  Decies  owns 
the  property,  and  is  descended  (mater- 
nally) from  the  FitzGeralds.  The 
greatest  portion  of  the  old  castle  was 
destroyed  by  fire.     See  note  %. 

"  Curraghmore,  Lord  Power's. 

mm  The  FitzGeralds  built  the  castle 
of  Cappoquin. 


t66 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Kilmadinnn  Strangallypp 

Balleconchin00  Shyanqq 

ThisCountiein  the  late  Rebellion  of  Desmond  was  least  infected 
with  treasons,  yet  much  Spoyled  by  the  Souldiers  that  lay  in 
Garrisone  there,  and  at  this  day  some  few  are  rebellion  without 
any  man  of  name  to  be  their  head.  There  belongeth  more 
Ships"  to  the  Cittie  of  Waterford  and  Wexford  than  to  all  Ireland 
besides. 


nn  Power's,  '  boldly  erected  on  the 
banks  of  the  Suir,'  now  gone  to 
decay. 

00  There  was  a  castle  in  the  parish  of 
Ballycashen. 

pp  In  the  neighbourhood  of  Tallow 
were  several  castles,  the  chief  of  which 
was  Strancally,  belonging  to  the  Des- 
mond family.  In  the  28th  Eliz.  James 
Fitzjohn  Gerrot  of  Strancally  was  at- 
tainted, also  his  son  Gerrot  Fitzjames. 

qq  In  28  Eliz.,  Maurice  McGerrot 
McenEarla  of  Shean  was  attainted. 
There  were  also  the  castles  of  Temple- 
michael,  Ballyheney,  Lismore,  Knock- 
moan,  Cloghlack,  Conagh,  Cullen, 
Castlereagh,  Ballyclough,  Feddens,  and 
Cloncoskeran  (belonging  to  the  Nugent 
family),  Ballycavoge  (of  the  Walshes). 
— See  Smith,  Ryland,  and  Parliam. 
Gazetteer  of  Ireland. 

"  'Between  the  rivers  Broadwater  and 
Suire  extends  the  very  pleasant  and 
fruitful  county  of  Waterford  .  .  .  Water- 
ford  for  wealth  and  resort  may  be  ranked 
the  second  city  in  Ireland.' — Camden. 


'  The  gentle  Swire,  that  making  way 

By  sweet  Clonmel  adorns  rich  Waterford.' 
— Spencer. 

'A  rich  and  well  inhabited  city,  es- 
teemed second  to  Dublin.' — Mory son's 
Itinerary,  p.  iii.  ch.  5. 

Waterford  was  famous  also  for  its  in- 
tellectual wealth  at  the  close  of  the  16th 
century — the  six  Waddings  (four  of 
whom  were  Jesuits),  the  Lombards, 
Sherlocks,  and  Comerfords,  Whites, 
and  Walshes,  shed  lustre  on  their  native 
city.  The  Annuae  literee  of  the  Society 
of  Jesus  (1641-1651)  says: — '  Water- 
fordia,  magnorum  ingeniorum  fecunda 
parens,  prioribus  annis  suppeditavit 
Societati  doctissimos  viros,  quibus  illus- 
travit  non  caeteras  modo  Residentias 
Missionis,  sed  et  alias  quoque  Provin- 
cias  Societatis  in  Hispania,  Germania, 
Belgio,  atque  ipsis  Indiis.' — Literae 
Annuae  Provinciae  Hibemiae,  published 
in  Rome,  cirea  1654. 

N.B. — The  information,  contained  in 
the  notes  without  a  reference,  is  taken 
from  Ry land's  and  Smith's  Histories  of 
Waterford. 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


167 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 

Cork  contayneth  all  the  lande  adjoining  to  the  Sea  from  the 
River  of  Youghall,  to  the  Bay  of  the  Dingle  and  the  River 
Margne3  ioining  to  the  Countie  of  Kerrie,  comprehending  the 
Counties  of  Kerrie  Wherrie,b  Kinnalo,0  Garvy  Roe's  Countrie,d 
the  Bishoprick  of  Rosse,  the  Country  of  Carbere  on  both  sides 


8  'Maigne,  the  cuntryof  Kerrywherry, 
Kilaloa,  Barry-Roe's  cuntry,  the  Bishop- 
ricke  of  Ross,  the  cuntry  of  Carbrye  on 
both  sydes  the  leape,  O'Mahons  and 
Ordriscalls  cuntry.  The  Bantry,  O'Sil- 
vian  bent,  O'Silvian  more,  and  all  Des- 
mond ;  all  which  lie  along  ye  coaste. 
In  the  middle  of  the  shire  lyeth  Muskry, 
devided  betweene  Sir  Cormoc  and  Sir 
Dermot  mac  teig  Clancark,  allso 
O'Challagon,  O'Heift,  Mac  Auly,  Mac 
Donoho,  followers  of  the  erle  of  Clan- 
car,  and  includeth  the  landes  of  the 
two  viscounts  Barry  and  Annoy.' — 
Dynunok.  The  variantes  here  would 
show  that  our  MS.  was  written  later 
than  Dymmok's  account,  as  it  speaks 
of  the  sons  of  Sir  Cormac  and  Sir  Der- 
mot McTeg. 

b  Kerricurihy  (Ciarraighe-Ciiirche) 
12  miles  long  by  six  broad,  contains 
Passage,  Monkstown,  and  Crosshaven  ; 
it  belonged  to  Maurice,  brother  of  the 
15th  Earl  of  Desmond. — Pari.  Gaz. 
of  Ireland.  Monkstown  Castle  or 
Castlemahon  belonged  to  the  Archde- 


kens  or  Mac  Odos.  John  Archdeken 
of  Dromdony  and  Monkstown  had  a 
son  John,  who  restored  the  castle  ;  the 
date  1636  is  on  the  mantlepiece  of  the 
principal  chamber.  The  tomb  (with 
inscription)  of  this  John  A.  is  in  the 
old  ruin  of  Tcampul  Oen  Bryn. —  Win- 
dele's  South  of  Ireland,  p.  180. 

c  Kinnalea,  13  miles  long  by  7  wide, 
is  south  of  Kerricurrihy ;  it  belonged 
to  the  Desmonds  ;  in  it  are  Inishannon 
and  Tracton,  etc.  The  gentlemen  of 
Kinnalea  in  1592  were  Long,  Bostock, 
Barries  alias  Barricok  (sic,  perhaps 
Barry  Oge),  Golde,  Robinson,  Graunte, 
Leoffm  Meade,  Awlie  O'Flinne,  Sars- 
field,  Fleming,  Roche,  Roold,  Cogan, 
Mac  Shane,  FitzMoris  Roche,  White, 
Risserd,  Fitzwilliam  Roche,  Piers 
Golde. —  Car.  Cal.,  an.  1591,  p.  64. 

d  '  Barry  Roe,'  in  the  margin;  at  one 
time  the  O'Cowigs  had  seven  castles 
in  this  district,  viz.,  Dundeedy,  Dun- 
owen,  Duneen,  Dunore,  Duncowig, 
Dungorley,  and  Dunworley. — Smith's 
Cork,  Book  ii.  ch.  3. 


1 68 


STATE  OF   IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


the  Leap,e  Omahoun/  and  O'Driscals  Countries.8  The 
Bantrieh  of  beer,  O'Sullivant,  More,  and  all  Desmond,  and 
which  lie  along  the  Coast.  Also  in  the  middle  of  this  Shyre 
Liyeth  Muskerie'  now  in  some  Sort  devided  between  the  Heyres 
of  Sr    Dermot   and  Sr    Cormack    Clancarties,  also   Ocallogan,k 


e  A  romantic  ravine  at  the  head  of 
Glandore  Harbour.  Carberie  belonged 
to  McCarthy  Reagh. 

f  O'Mahony's  country,  the  present 
barony  of  Kinnalmeaky. 

e  Corca  Laidhe.  Their  territory  was 
co-extensive  with  the  diocese  of  Ross  ; 
but  in  1615  they  owned  only  the  seven 
parishes,  which  constitute  the  rural 
deanery  of  Colleymore  and  Colleybeg. 
They  had  the  castles  of  Gleann,  Bear- 
chain  or  Castlehaven,  Lough-Hyne, 
Ardagh,  Baltimore,  Dunnangall,  Dun- 
an-oir,  Rincaliskey,  and  Sherkin. — See 
p.  143  of  Miscell.  of  Celtic  Society. 

h  Bantry  and  Bearra  form  the  south- 
west portion  of  the  Co.  of  Cork.  The 
lord  of  Bantry  was  Sir  Owen  O'Sullevan ; 
the  lord  of  Bearra  was  his  nephew,  the 
famous  Donnell  O'Sullevan. 

'  O'Sullivan  Beare's  countrey  con- 
teyneth  160  ploughlandes;  McCarthy 
More  claymeth  there  Risinge  out,  the 
findinge  of  50  Galleyglas,  the  geavinge 
of  the  Rodd,  and  to  the  value  of  ^40 
a  yeare  in  spendings  and  refeccons. 
The  countrie  of  Clanlawras  [in  O'Sul- 
levan Beare's  country]  conteyneth  32 
ploughlands.' — MacCarthy  Mor,  p.  31. 

O'Sullevan's  forces,  as  given  by 
Carew,  are  stated  in  Miss  Cusack's 
History  of  Cork — O'Sullivan   Bere,  30 


companies ;  Owen  O'Sullevan's  sons  in 
Bantry,  80;  McFineen  Duff,  30  in  Bere 
and  Glanarought;  Clanlaura,  30  in  Bere 
and  Bantry;  the  Coubrey,  40  in  Bere; 
O'Sullevan  Mor,  60  in  Dunkerron ; 
McGillicuddy,  100  in  Dunkerron; 
McCrohan,  40  in  Iveragh.  The  Eger- 
ton  MSS.  give  the  various  branches  as 
O'Sullevan  Mor,  O'Sullevan  Bere, 
McFineen  Duff,  McGiIlicuddy,  and  the 
O'Sughrues. — Hist,  of  Cork,  by  the  Nun 
of  Kenmarc,  p.  332. 

1  '  Muskeray,  a  woody  tract,  in  which 
the  name  of  Cormac  Mac-Teg  is 
famous.' — Camden. 

k Conor  O'Ceallachain,  called  'Conor 
of  the  Rock,'  was  lord  of  Poble  Hy 
Ceallachain,  (i.e.,  the  parishes  of  Clon- 
meen  and  Kilshanig,)  owned  Drumneen 
Castle,  '  the  ruins  of  which  still  present 
an  august  appearance.'  His  Tanist  or 
heir  elect  was  Shan  McTeig.  In  1690 
the  Earl  of  Barrymore  wrote  to  the 
Duke  of  Wirtemberg — '  I  have  received 
a  humble  petition  on  behalf  of  Colonel 
McDonogh,  chief  of  the  country  called 
Dunhallow,  and  of  another  chieftain 
of  a  country  called  O'Callaghan.  They 
will  bring  with  them  a  thousand  men, 
and  at  least  seven  or  eight  thousand 
cows.'  This  was  Colonel  Donogh  O'Cal- 
laghan.— U A/ton's  Army  List,  p.  867. 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


169 


O'Kief,'  McAuley,m  and  McDonoghe,n  followers  to  the  late  Earle 
of  Cloncare  and  including-  also  the  Lands  of  the  Two  Viscounts 
Barrhy0  and  Armoy.p  So  this  Countie  is  bounded  with  the  Sea 
East,  South  and  South  east,  with  the  Mountains  of  Slewlogher  to 
the  West,  and  partlie  with  the  great  Water  and  partlie  with  the 
Countie  of  Limerick  to  the  North.  This  Countie  being  the 
greatest  in  the  Realm  have  bene  tollerated  to  have  Two  Sheriffs, 


'  Art  Oge  O'Keeffe,  b.  in  1547,  in- 
augurated in  1583,  d.  1 6 10;  mar.  a 
dau.  of  M'Carthie  of  lniskeen.  His 
sons  were  Daniel  of  Ballymacquirk, 
Donogh  of  Cuilbeggan,  and  his  suc- 
cessor Manus  of  Dromagh,  who  was 
'  chief  of  his  nacion,'  and  was  b.  in 
1567.  Art  Oge  owned  the  castles  of 
Dromagh,  Du-Ardgil,  Drumtariff,  and 
Drumsicane.  Dixon  Cornelius  O'Keeffe 
of  Dublin,  Barrister-at-law,  is  of  this 
family. — See  Tribes  of  Ireland,  and 
D'  Alton  s  Army  List. 

m  Of  Castle  Mac  Auliffe,  near  New- 
market. The  territory  of  Mac  Auliffe, 
or  Eas-Ealla,  was  the  land  between 
Newmarket  and  the  boundaries  of  the 
counties  of  Limerick  and  Kerry.  The 
head  of  this  family,  who  had  been  born 
to  a  handsome  estate,  was  weigh-master 
in  the  market-house  at  Kenmare  in 
1840. — Tribes  of  Ireland,  p.  66. 

Among  the  gentlemen  pensioners  in 
the  Spanish  army  in  1606  were  John 
M'Awly,  McAwly's  son,  Conogher 
M'Awly  his  brother,  Dermod  McAwly  of 
Clan  Awlye,  and  Wm  M'Auliffe,  all 
from  Cork. —  Car.  Cat.,  an.  1606^.397. 

*  Lord  of  Duhallow,  of  the  McCarthy 


race,  built  such  a  strong  and  large  for- 
tress at  Kanturk,  that  Elizabeth's 
council  ordered  the  work  to  be  stopped. 
See  a  description  of  it  in  Smith's  Cork. 
In  1598  Elizabeth  wrote  to  the  Presi- 
dent of  Minister — '  If  McDonnaght  will 
serve  us  against  Derby  McOwen,  who 
takes  the  title  of  McCarthy  More,  we 
will  bestow  upon  him  the  country  of 
Dually.'— Car.  Ceil,  p.  286. 

0  Lord  Barry's  lands  are  Barries- 
Court,  Inchinibakye,  Castell-Lions, 
Botevant  and  Liscarrall  in  Orrery, 
Timologe,  Rathebarry  and  Lislie  in 
Ybaune ;  total,  392  plowlands ;  also 
he  has  the  use  of  three-parts  of  every 
freeholders'  lands  within  these  manors, 
which  amount  to  1000  plowlands. — 
Car.  Cal. 

The  gentlemen  of  Orrery  in  1592 
were — Barry  alias  McShian,  Lumbard, 
Eily  Barry  of  Bregoge ;  P.  H.  Rirragus 
(?).  Chillister,  Miz  of  Lessfricken,  Byrn, 
Nangle,  Dalie,  Rallaghan  McOwen.— 
Car.  Cal,  p.  64. 

p  .forte Fermoy,  the  Barony  of  Fermoy, 
Roche's  country,  a  beautiful  territory. 
It  is  called  the  '  country  of  fine  roads ' 
by  the  Bard  Ruadh  O'Daly. 


170 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO    I  598. 


the  one  particular  in   Desmond,  the  other  in  the  rest  of  the 

Countrie,  and  this  without  any  Ground  in  Law,  but  by  discretion 

of  the  L.    Deputies,  the  inconvenience  thereof  being  espied  it 

hath  been  of  late  thought  good  that  one  Sherriff  should  for 

Kerrie  and  Desmond,   and  so  Two  Sherriffs  in    one  Countie 

against  Law  taken  away. 

Cities  and        Corkeq  a  walled  Cittie  with  a  good  Haven. 

Toivnes  Clone  )  .  , 

•d        r  J  Bishopncks  ruined. 

Youghall5  a  Haven  toune  walled. 


q '  Cork  is  of  an  oval  figure,  sur- 
rounded by  walls,  environed  and  inter- 
sected by  the  river,  which  is  passable 
only  by  bridges ;  and  consisting  of  one 
straight  street,  continued  by  a  bridge. 
A  little  trading  town  of  great  resort  and 
eminence,  but  so  beset  by  rebellious 
neighbours  as  to  require  as  constant  a 
watch  as  if  constantly  besieged,  and  the 
inhabitants  not  daring  to  trust  their 
daughters  to  marry  in  the  country,  are 
all  somehow  related.' — Cam  da:. 

'At  this  day  (1575)  the  citty  of  Cork 
is  so  encumbered  with  unquiet  neigh- 
bours of  great  power,  that  they  are 
forced  to  watch  their  gates  continually, 
to  keep  them  shut  at  service  time,  at 
meales,  from  sunneset  to  sunne  rising; 
nor  suffer  any  stranger  to  enter  with  his 
weapon,  but  to  leave  the  same  at  a 
lodge  appointed.  They  walk  out  for 
recreation  at  seasons,  with  strength  of 
men  furnished  ;  they  match  in  wedlock 
among  themselves.' — Campion,  p.  96. 

Some  Cork  families  are  mentioned 


in  the  following  monuments,  etc.,  men- 
tioned by  Windele: — 

In  Shandon  Churchyard  is  the  tomb 
of  Stephen  Coppinger  of  Ballyvolane, 
'  chief  of  the  name,'  erected  by  his  wife, 
nee  Goold  ;  he  was  born  in  16 10. 

Inscription  on  a  chalice — '  Dna 
Margareta  Sarsfield  me  fieri  fecit  pro 
fribus  minoribus  de  Shandon,  Anno 
Domini  1627,  orate  pro  ea,  et  pro 
marito  ejus  Waltro  Coppinger.' 

J.  White  the  elder  by  his  will  in 
1582  directs  his  body  to  be  buried  in 
S1-  James'  Chapell,  Christ  Church, 
'where  mine  ancestors  lye.' 

Tomb  (date  1584)  of  J.  Coleman 
and  his  wife  Anstace  McDonnell — 
Windele,  p.  56. 

Tomb  of  Walshe  and  his  wife  An 
Goaghe,  with  Templars'  ensigns,  1592. 
—  Windele 's  South  of  Ireland. 

' '  Ross,  formerly  of  great  resort,  but, 
since  a  bar  of  sand  has  been  thrown  up, 
it  is  deserted.' — Camden. 

s  'Youghall — no  large  town  indeed, 


COUNTIE  OF   CORK. 


171 


Kinsale'  in  like  sort. 

Buttevant"  ane  inland  Towne  belonging  to  the  Viscount 

Barrhy. 
Moyallo,"  a  fayre   market  Towne  unwalled  belonging 
to  the  L.  President,  where  he  maketh  his  Residence. 
Tallow.    Tallowyhe,  a  market  Towne  upon  the  great  Water. 
Principal  Viscount  Buttevant"  or  Barrhy,  his   name  is  Barrhy, 
Men.  his  chief  hous  Buttevant. 

Viscount  Armoyw    or    Roche,    his  name    Roche,    his 

chief  Hous  Armoy. 
L.  Courcy,w  his  name  so. 


but  encompassed  with  walls  of  an  ob- 
long form,  with  a  commodious  harbour, 
with  a  key  fortified.  The  fertility  of 
the  neighbouring  country  so  invites 
merchants,  that  it  is  much  resorted  to, 
and  has  for  its  chief  magistrate  a  mayor.' 
— Camden. 

'  A  seaport  town  scituate  at  the  ftbot 
of  high  rocky  mountains,  upon  the 
mouth  of  the  Blackwater.' 

In  the  church  there  is  an  '  altar 
tomb  '  of  Piers  Miagh,  who  died  in 
I^33i  agcd  43.  On  it  is  a  Latin  In- 
scription with  a  Latin  Distich,  and  there 
were  also  the  following  words  in  Eng- 
lish (which  are  now  effaced) : — '  Pray 
for  the  Founders  hereof,  Piers  Miagh 
Fitzjames  of  Yoghal,  Alderman,  and 
Phillis  Miagh  alias  Nagle,  his  onely 
wife,  who  made  this  monument  for  their 
last  lodging  in  this  world.' 

In  the  Portingal  Chapel  are  the  tombs 
of  the  Youghal  merchants,  Edw.  Cop- 
pinger,  who  d.  in  1624,  and  R.  Nagle. 


who   died    in    1605. — Dynelfs    Tour. 
Adams,  whose  tombstone  is  in  the 
Churchyard  of  St.  Mary's,  was  born  in 
1588,  when  Raleigh  was  Mayor,  and 
he  d.  in   1715,  aged  126  years. — Note 
to  Dynelfs  Tour,  by  Rev.  S.  Hayman. 
The   image  of  the   Blessed  Virgin, 
which   formerly  belonged   to  the   Do- 
minican Convent  of  Youghal,  has  the 
inscription — '  Orate  pro  anima  Onoriae 
filiae  Jaeobi  de  Geraldine,  quae  me  fieri 
fecit,  an.  161 7.' — IVindeie,  p.  81. 

'  See  the  Map  of  Kinsale,  and  the 
account  of  its  siege  in  Pacata  Hibemia. 
"Wadding  wrote,  circ.  1640,  'The 
town  had  been  large  and  frequented, 
is  now  reduced.  Two  illustrious  fa- 
milies, the  Barrys  and  Lombards,  had 
their  residence  here.' — Miss  Cusaek's 
Cork,  p.  490. 

v  Had  belonged  to  the  Earls  of  Des- 
mond.    It  was  defended  by  two  castles. 
"'  Vide  infra  among  the  Peers  and 
Bishops. 


I  72 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  B.w  of  Cork,  Clone  and  Roscarbery. 
Sr  Owen  McCarte  reaghe.x 
Sr  Thomas  Barrhy  oge.y 
Sr  Owen  O'Sullivan.2 


" '  In  1593,  Mag  Carthaigh  Riabhach 
(Owen  McCarthy  Reagh)  Tighearna  or 
Lord  of  Carbery,  died.  He  was  a  sen- 
sible, pious,  and  truly  hospitable  and 
noble-minded  man.  Donal,  son  of 
Cormac  na  h-Aoine,  took  his  place.' 
Owen  had  been  inaugurated  in  1575. 
— Annals, years  1576,  and  1593.  Owen, 
who  was  described  by  St.  Leger  as  '  a 
notorious  papist  who  would  be  in  re- 
bellion if  he  dared,'  wrote  to  Elizabeth 
in  1583  that  he  had  contributed  .£7497 
out  of  his  territory  to  crush  the  Des- 
monds. On  the  23rd  Dec.  1587,  he 
wrote  from  his  'Lodgings  atWestmystre' 
to  the  Lord  Treasurer  that  he  had  spent 
all  the  money  he  had  deemed  enough 
to  bring  with  him,  asked  a  loan  of 
^200  or  ^300,  which  he  'will  pay  in 
Ireland  to  the  Lord  Deputy.'  In  the 
postscript  he  asks  'a  Loan  of  one  fortie 
ponds  to  refreshe  me  theis  holydays.' 
— McCarthy  Mor, pp.  19  and  99.  Owen 
had  three  sons,  but  his  nephew  Donal, 
'  the  eldest  relative  of  the  blood,'  suc- 
ceeded by  Tanistry.  Owen's  sons, 
Donogh  Mael,  and  Finin,  commanded 
400  of  the  insurgents  in  1602. — Car. 
CaL,  268  and  404,  an.  1602. 

Sir  Owen's  dau.  Evline  was  the  wife 
of  Sir  Finin  O'Driscoll  {infra,  note  aa). 

y  The  country  of  Barry  Og  (or 
•young  Barry')  was  Kinalea,  in  which 


was  his  castle  of  Rincorran  near  Kin- 
sale. — See  Annals,  pp.  2269,  2271, 
and  2 16 1.  'Barry  Oge,  and  the  bar- 
ren's brother  John  in  the  Muskry  com- 
mand 120  foot,  and  30  horse.' — 
Dymmok. 

"Sir  Owen  O'Sullevan  Beare;  O'Sul- 
levan  Mor  is  mentioned,  infra.  Owen, 
in  1598,  was  negotiating  a  marriage 
between  his  dau.  and  Donal,  base  son 
of  the  Earl  of  Clencar,  whom  he  tried 
to  get  elected  McCarthy  Mor;  in  1594 
he  died,  and  his  nephew  Donall  became 
Lord  of  Beare,  though  Owen's  son  had 
'  the  best  part  of  Beare  and  Bantry.' — 
McCarthy  Mor,  pp.  27,  37,  134. 
Owen's  son  Owen,  and  his  other  sons 
were  on  the  English  side  at  the  siege 
of  Dunboy,  as  they  laid  claim  to  the 
Lordship  of  Beare.  Young  Owen  was 
Lord  of  Ban  trie  in  16 15  ;  he  d.  in  161 7; 
he  was  nephew  of  Lord  Barry,  and 
brother-in-law  of  Sir  Cormac  McCarthy 
of  Muscry,  of  Sir  Nicli.  Browne  and 
O'Sullevan  Mor.  His  cousin  Donal 
Lord  of  Beare,  after  the  defeat  of  Kin- 
sale,  held  out  against  overwhelming 
odds  ;  and  his  castle  of  Dunboy  was  so 
heroically  defended  by  M'Geoghagan, 
that  Carew  in  the  Pacata  says  that 
'  so  obstinate  and  resolved  a  defence 
had  not  been  seen  in  this  kingdom.' 
When  Donal  was  deserted  by  his  allies. 


COUNTIE  OF   CORK. 


173 


Sr  Fyn  0'Driscall.aa 

The  Sones  of  Sr  Dermott  and  Sr 


Cormackbb  McTeig. 


he  set  out  with  400  men  and  600  women 
and  children  from  Glengariff  on  Dec. 
31,  1602  ;  and  fought  his  way  through 
the  Barries,  the  Butlers,  the  Burkes  of 
Clanricard,  and  on  the  16th  of  Jan. 
reached  O'Rourk's  Castle  of  Leitrim, 
with  his  numbers  reduced  to  thirty-five 
people.  He  was  assassinated  in  Madrid 
in  16 1 8. — Miscel.  Celt.  Soc.  p.  403,  and 
Preface  to  the  Historic,  Catholica,  ed.  by 
Dr.  Kelly.  His  cousin,  the  Historian, 
Philip  O'Sullevan  Beare,  says  of  him — ■ 
'  Obiens  annum  57  agebat.  Erat  vir 
plane  pius  et  largus  maxime  in  pauperes 
et  egenos.  Duobus  vel  tribus  Missarum 
sacris  quotidie  interesse  solebat,  longas 
ad  Deum  et  Superos  quotidianas  preces 
effundens  .  .  .  Erat  procerus  et  ele- 
gans  statura,  vultu  pulcher' — p.  338. 
The  Annals,  p.  2291,  say  he  was  'the 
best  commander  in  Munster,  for  wis- 
dom and  valour  ; '  and  the  Pacata  Hi- 
bernia  (book  iii.  chap.  17)  tells  of  'his 
brave  charge  (at  Aughrim)  on  our  men, 
who  were  more  in  numbers  than  the 
rebels,  in  the  which  Captaine  Mai  by 
was  slaine,  upon  whose  fall  Sir  T.  Burke 
and  his  Troopes,  fainting  with  the  losse 
of  many  men,  studied  their  safeties  by 
flight,  and  the  rebels,  with  little  harm, 
marched  into  O'Rourk's  Country.' 

aa  O'h-Eidirsceoil.  Sir  Fineen  O'Dris- 
coll,  chief  of  Collymore  in  1585, 
was  living  in  16 14.  There  is  an  Irish 
poem  on  his  death   by  Teig   O'Daly. 


From  it  we  learn  that  his  'eye  was  rapid;' 
'  his  hand  early  in  seeking  the  heavy 
weapons;'  'histongue  powerful.'  Hisson 
Conor  was  a  Captain,  and  his  grandson 
Conor  was  an  ensign  in  Spain.  Fineen 
mar.  a  dau.  of  Sir  Owen  McCarthy 
Reagh ;  his  son  mar.  a  dau.  of  Donal 
Mac  Owen  Mac  Swyne  of  Muskrie. 
His  grandson  Conor  Og  was  killed  in 
a  naval  fight  between  the  Spaniards  and 
Turks  in  1619.  In  1601,  '  Donogh 
O'Driscoll  delivered  to  the  Spaniards 
his  castle  of  Castlehaven;  Sir  Fineen 
O'D.  (who  never  had  been  tainted  with 
the  least  spot  of  disloyaltie)  rendered 
to  them  his  castle  of  Donneshed  at  Bal- 
timore and  his  castle  at  Donnelong.' — 
See  Miscell.  Celt.  Soc.  and  Pac.  Hib. 

In  1602  Carew  took  and  burnt  Lit- 
tertenlis,  a  castle  belonging  to  the 
Traitor  Sir  Finyn  O'Driscoll's  son. 
'  Fynin's  three  sons  abroad  are  ready  to 
skip  to  Ireland  and  do  mischief.' 

Collymore  contains  63  ploughlands, 
the  Lord  whereof  is  O'Driscoll  More  ; 
Collybeg  is  O'Driscoll  Oge's  land,  and 
contains  34  ploughlands. — Car.  Cal., 
year  1599,  p.  353. 

bb  Sir  Dermot  and  Sir  Cormac  were 
brothers — their  sons  were  enemies. 

'  Cormac  Mac  Taige,  Lord  of  Mus- 
kery,  a  comely-shaped,  bright-coun- 
tenanced man,  who  possessed  most 
whitewashed  edifices,  fine  built  castles 
and   hereditary   seats   of  any   of    the 


174 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


McDonaghe. 


descendants  of  Eoghan  Mor,  d.  in  1583. 
The  people  were  at  strife  after  his 
death  ;  some  supported  Callaghan,  son 
of  Teig,  on  account  of  his  seniority ; 
others  joined  Cormac,  son  of  Dermot, 
who  sought  the  chieftaincy  on  account 
of  his  father's  patent ;  others  supported 
the  young  sons  of  the  deceased  Cormac 
MTaig. — Annals,  an.  1583.  In  1597 
Brown  writes  to  Burleigh — '  There  has 
been  muchmurderingamong  themselves 
(the  M'Carthies  of  Muskery)  about 
their  lands.'  The  sons  of  Sir  Dermot 
were  Cormac  and  Teig  McDermot ; 
the  sons  of  Sir  Cormac  were  '  Charles ' 
or  Cormac  Oge,  and  Teig  McCormac. 

Cronelly,  and  Windele  in  his  South 
of  Ireland  (p.  228)  mistake  Cormac 
McDermot  or  M'Dermond  for  Cormac 
MTeig. 

'  The  Captain  or  Lo.  of  Muskery 
hath  two  sonnes,  and  a  brother  called 
Teigh  Mac  Dermonde,  and  Charles, 
sonne  of  Sir  Cormac  Teigh,  last  Lo.  of 
Muskerry.'  '  The  countrey  of  Mus- 
kerie  is  very  large,  wherein  five  other 
countreis  are  conteyned  ;  he  claymeth 
of  them  risinge  out;  M'Carthy  Mor 
claimeth  here  the  keapinge  of  thirtie 
galleglass,  and  findinge  of  him  for  a 
certen  tyme.' — McCarthy  Mor. 

'  The  septs  of  the  Carties  themselves 
(with  their  Followers  and  Dependants) 
were  known  to  bee  no  lesse  than  3000 
able  men.  The  rest  were  no  less  than 
45°° strong.  CormackeMTJermondwas 
Lord  of  Muskerry,  a  populous,  a  rich, 


and  a  fast  Countrey,' — Pac.  Hib. ,  p.  131. 
During  the  siege  of  Kinsale  there  was 
a  young  gentleman  of  the  Carties,  Teg 
Mac  Cormock,  son  to  that  well-deserv- 
ing gentleman,  Sir  Cormack  Mac  Teg, 
who,  being  of  the  President's  Troope 
of  Horse,  combined  with  the  Enemie, 
stealing  away  his  Horse  and  Hackney.' 
He  writes  from  Carrigifuky,  June  1602, 
to  ask  remission  of  his  offences  which 
he  committed  'not  to  hurt  her  Majestie, 
but  to  recover  against  my  Cosen  Cor- 
mock Mac  Dermody  some  means  to 
maintain  my  decayed  estate,  and  still 
likely  to  be  suppressed  by  his  greatnesse, 
who  will  by  no  means  give  me  a  portion 
of  land  to  live  upon.'  'This  young  man 
bearing  no  good  will  to  Cormock  Mac 
Dermody,  his  Cosen,  Lord  of  Muskerry,' 
makes  some  communications  true  or 
false.  Whereupon  Carew  resolved  to 
seize  Cormock's  castles  of  Blarney, 
Kilcrea,  and  Macrumpe.  Sir  C.  Wil- 
mot  and  Captaine  Harvie,  with  a  ser- 
geant and  24  foote,  make  shew  of  going 
to  hunt  the  Bucke  neare  the  castle  of 
Blarney.  This  castle  '  is  four  piles 
joined  in  one,  seated  on  a  maine  rock, 
and  so  free  from  mining,  the  wall  18 
foote  thicke,  and  well  flancked  at  each 
corner  to  the  best  advantage.  Sir  C. 
Wilmot  asked  for  wine  and  usquebagh 
(whereof  Irish  gentlemen  are  seldom 
disfurnished).  But  the  Warders,  whether 
out  of  the  jealous  custom  of  the  Nation 
in  general  (which  is,  not  to  admit  any 
strangers  in  their  master's  absence  to 


COUNTIE    OF  CORK. 


175 


0'Kief.dd 


0'Gallogan.dd 


come  into  their  castles),  neither  Sir  Char- 
les (though  he  much  importuned  to  see 
the  roomey  within)  nor  any  of  his  com- 
pany were  permitted  to  go  into  the  gate 
of  the  castle,  nor  hardly  to  looke  within 
the  gate  of  the  Bawne.'  Cormac  himself 
was  invited  to  Cork  and  imprisoned. 

Cormack  consented  to  hand  over  his 
castle  of  Blarney  '  to  Captain  Taaffe, 
in  whom  he  reposed  much  trust,  so  that 
no  others  might  have  the  custody 
thereof.  His  castle  of  Kilcrey  sur- 
rendered to  Cap.  Slingsbie  ;  but  Mo- 
crumpe,  seated  in  the  heart  of  Muscrey, 
surrounded  with  woods  and  bogs,  could 
not  be  gotten  without  the  countenance 
of  an  Armie.'  Cormock  escapes  from 
his  prison  in  Cork,  and  Wilmot  is 
ordered  to  raise  the  siege  of  Macrumpe ; 
the  castle  took  fire  while  a  pig  was 
singed,  and  the  warders  trying  to  cut 
their  way  to  the  woods,  were  killed  to 
the  number  of  50.  As  Cormack's 
children  and  wife  were  prisoners,  he 
did  not  wish  to  fight,  and  begged  to  be 
pardoned,  and  he  was  pardoned  for 
good  reasons — as  he  was  the  strongest 
man  of  followers  in  Munster,  his  Coun- 
trey  reached  even  to  the  walls  of  Cork ; 
he  had  been  only  a  Jugling  Traytor ; 
not  to  forgive  him  'might  have  bred 
newbroyles,and  protracted  the  warres  of 
Mounster  ad  infinitum.'  '  Her  Majesty 
might  have  got  his  land,'  which,  'in  the 
opinion  of  all  wise  men,  would  have 
proved  too  dear  a  purchase.' 


'Owen  Mac  Teig  of  the  Drisshan, 
a  Carty  of  Muskerry,  and  his  Cosen, 
Owen  Ologh  M'Swiney,  led  Bagnall  and 
his  forces  to  Tirrell's  quarters  at  night, 
which  were  surprised,  80  men  killed. 
Tirrell,  who  with  his  wife  had  to  run 
away  half-naked,  lost  50  horse  and 
hacknies,  1000  cowes,  sheep  and  gar- 
rans,  great  store  of  arms  and  baggage ; 
only  17  of  our  men  hurt.  'Tirrell 
rageth  in  fury  against  the  inhabitants  of 
Muskerry,  burning  their  corn  and  cab- 
bines  and  putting  them  to  the  sword,  as 
he  thought  that  Cormock  had  contrived 
this  plot.' — Pac.  Hit.,  599,  634,  641. 

"  Two  of  the  McCarthies  claimed  to 
be  McDonogh:  Dermod  McOwen,  who 
seems  to  be  meant  here,  and  Donogh 
McCormac  of  note  (E6)  infra.  I  regret 
that  I  could  not  find  any  pedigree  of 
the  McDonogh  Carthies.  These  '  two 
Chiefs,'  as  the  Annals  call  them  (p. 
1S37),  were  at  strife  for  the  Lordship 
of  Duhallow,  namely,  Dermot  (son  of 
Owen,  son  of  Donogh  an-Bhothair,  son 
of  Owen,  son  of  Donogh),  and  Donogh 
(son  of  Cormac  Oge,  son  of  Cormac, 
son  of  Donogh).'  They  could  not  be 
nearer  than  third  cousins.  O'Sullevan 
Beare  says  of  them  (pp.  196  and  199), 
'  Dermysius  et  Donatus  Mac  Carrhae 
de  Allae  principatu  lite  contendentes 
judiciis  regiorum  judicum  stomacha- 
bantur.  Allae  principatus  competitores 
conspirarunt.'     See  note  ". 

'The  ist  is  the  countrey  of  McDonoc- 


176  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

McAwlie.dd  Fynen"  McCartie. 


hoe  (called  Duallo)  vvch  hath  w'hin  it 
thre  other  countreis,  O'Chalachan's 
countrey.  He  claymeth  in  these  coun- 
treis the  gevinge  of  the  Rod  to  the 
chieffe  Lords  at  their  first  entrie,  who 
by  receivinge  a  whit  wand  at  his  hands, 
for  which  they  pay  him  a  certen  dutie, 
are  thereby  declared  from  thenceforthe 
to  be  Lords  of  those  countries.  He 
claymeth  allso  that  they  are  to  rise  out 
wth  him  when  he  makes  warre ;  to 
maintaine  for  him  seaven  and  20  Galle- 
glasses. — State  Paper  given  in  the  Life 
of  Mac  Carthy  Mor. 

ddSee  supra  notes  "•  '•  m.  McAwly 
was  'very  inward  with  O'Neill.'  About 
1602,  Sir  F.  Barkley,  'finding  good  cause 
and  fitt  opportunity  to  plague  Mac 
Awley  (and  his  Tenants  who,  under 
protection,  relieved  the  broken-hearted 
rebels)  harassed  all  the  countrey  of 
Clanowlie,  and  took  from  thence  1000 
Cows,  200  Garrans,  besides  Sheepe 
and  other  spoyle,  and  had  the  kill- 
ing of  many  traitors.' — Pac.   Hib.,  p. 

"  Finghin  Mac  Carthaigh, '  McCarthy 
More,'  and  Chief  of  Carbery.  See  his 
Life  and  Letters,  by  Mr.  M'Carthy  Glas, 
and  a  short  sketch  of  his  extrordinary 
career  in  the  Appendix.  He  was  the 
most  powerful  of  Irish  chiefs,  after 
O'Neill  and  O'Donnell.  This  Finghin 
or  '  Florens  Mac  Carthy  myt  be  both 
McCarthy  More  and  McCarthy  Rewe, 
and  thereby  become  farre   greater   in 


Munster  than  ever  was  Desmond,  and 
greater  then  any  man  in  all  Ireland,  that 
hath  ben  in  this  age,  for  O'Sulivah  More 
and  O'Sulivan  Bere  they  do  depend  on 
Mac  Carthy  More  ;  The  O'Driscoes 
do  depend  on  Mac  Carthy  Rewe.  The 
Lords  of  Muskry  and  Duallow,  being 
both  great  territories,  are  of  the  Mac 
Cartyes,  and  depend  upon  that  chieff 
house,  and  so  do  divers  other  pettie 
Lords  of  smaller  territories,  all  wch  do  lye, 
the  one  upon  the  other  from  Cork, 
above  sixty  miles  together  westward, 
upon  the  very  uttermost  pts  of  Spayne.' 
— Report  on  Florence  in  1595,  sup- 
posed to  be  by  Popham. — See  McCarthy 
Mor,  p.  135. 

'  These  that  follow  are  allyd,  and 
have  matched  with  the  House  of  Clan 
Kartie  : — A  Syster  of  the  late  Earle  of 
Desmonde  married  to  the  Earle  of  Clan 
Kartie.  A  Syster  of  James  Fitz  Maurice 
was  married  to  Sir  Donoghe  McCarty, 
by  whom  he  had  issue,  Florence  and 
his  brother.  Corm'  McDermode,  now 
Lo.  of  Muskerys  Mother  was  another 
Syster  of  the  saide  James  Fitz  Morrice 
the  Traytor.  The  Lo.  Roche  married 
a  third  Syster  of  the  said  James,  by 
whom  she  hath  a  sonne  and  a  daughter; 
which  daughter  is  married  to  Mac 
Donoghe,  now  Lord  of  Dowalla. 

'The  Seneschall  is  married  to  a 
daughter  of  the  said  James  Fitz  Morrice.' 
— Notes  for  Her  Majesty  in  1588. — 
AP  Carthy  Mor,  p.  42. 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 

Donell  pipeff  McCartie. 


Ml 


Fineen  wrote  to  Burghley  in  1595 — 
'  Where  Yor  Lop  hath  enquired  who 
was  heir  of  the  said  contrey  of  Carbery 
— as  for  my  parte  I  know  not  a  more 
lawfull  heir  than  myself,  seeing  Law 
doth  allow  custome  as  well  in  Englande 
as  in  Ireland,  and  that  custome  hath 
bene  ever  inviolablie  kept  there ;  and 
yor  Lop  shall  fynd  me  more  coniform- 
able  than  Donell  Pypy  himselfe,  or 
Dearmed  McCarthy,  or  Donogh  Oge 
McCarthy,  or  Donogh  M'Owen  McCar- 
thy, or  Florence  McOwen  or  any  other 
of  the  Cept.' 

'A  not  of  such  as  are  Lordes  of  Cun- 
tries  being  Finnin  Mac  Card's  kinsmen 
and  followers  of  the  Earls  of  Clancarte 
within  Desmond  and  the  Co.  of  Cork 
adioining  upon  Desmond  : — 

Finnin's 

Teg-  Aunt'S 


Sonns. 

O'Sullevan  Mooar,  married  unto  Fin- 
nin's Sister. 

O'Sullevant  Bear.      O'Donnaogh-Glan. 

Mac  Gillo  Cuddie.    Mac  Crehon. 

Mac  Gillo  Newlan.   MTJonnelL. 

Hugh  Cormok  of  Dungwill. 

Clan  Dermond.  Clan  Lawras. 

Hugh  Donill  Erik.     McFinnin. 

McFinnin  Duff.  Clan  Teige  Kettas. 

McDonogh  Barret.     M'Cawlef. 

O'Kiffe.  O'Kelahan.  O'Dale. 

With  many  others,  and  alied  by  him- 
selfe and  his  wife  unto  most  of  the 

noblemen  in  Ireland.' — M'  Carthy  Mor, 

p.  152. 


O'f  the  160  castles  built  in  Cork,  26 
were  erected  by  the  McCarthies. — 
J  Vin  dele's  South  of  Ireland. 

Irish  Forces  in  Desmond. 

Horse.  Gallo-  Kerne, 
glas. 

Mac  Carthy  More,  Prince  of  that 

portion  .  .  .  .  40  160  2000 
Mac   Carthy   Reagh,    Lord   of 

Carbry          .          .         .          .6080  2000 

Donogh  Mac  Carthy  of  Dowallie  24     80  200 

Teig  Mac  Cormac  of  Muskry  .  40    80  200 

O'Keefe 120  100 

M'Awliffe        .        .        .        .  80      o  60 

O'Donovan  .  .  .  .  6  o  60 
O'Driscolls   of    Collimore    and 

Baltimore     .         .         .         .60  200 

O'Mahon  of  Ivaghe          .  26       o  120 

O'Sullevan  Beare  and  Bantry  .  10  o  200 
O'Donough    More    of    Lough 

Lene 12      o  200 

O'Mahoni  of  Brin    .         .         .  46       o  100 

O'Dwyre  of  Kil-na-Managhe  .  12  o  100 
McTeig    M'Plilip    of    Kilna- 

loghengarty   .         .         .         .  6       o  40 

The  last  two  were  not  followers  of 
Mac  Carthy. —  Carew,  quoted  in  M'  Car- 
thy Mor,  p.  9. 

'  These  are  of  Carbery,  of  Florence 
his  countrie,  his  followers,  cosens, 
and  kinsmen.  Donell  McCarty,  als 
McCarty  Reogh;  Donogh  Oge  O'Cullen, 
Reynold  Oge  O'Hurley  th  elder;  Teigh- 
en-orsie  McCarty;  Kyrone  McMoragho 
McSweynie  ;  Teig  Oreigan  ;  Moroghe 
M'Dermod  Oreigan,  Dermod,  John, 
and  Donell,  sonnes  to  the  said  Morgho. 
Teigh  MTJonnell  Icrooly  als  Branagh  ; 
Owen  McDermodie  McDonnell  Cartie.' 
— AP  Carthy  Mor,  p.  103. 

"  Donal-na-Pipe    McCarthy    Reagh, 


1 78 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Donaghe  McCormack.sg 
Patrick  Condorn.hh 


Lord  of  Carbery,  first  cousin  and  great 
enemy  of  Florence,  who  was,  as 
Tanist,  to  succeed  him.  He  pledged 
himself  in  securities  of  .£10,000  to 
Florence,  not  to  interfere  with  the  Irish 
custom  of  Tanistry.  He  was  son  of 
Cormac  na-h-Aoine ;  he  was  elected 
McCarthy  Reagh  in  1593;  he  mar.  a 
sister  of  the  'Sugaun,'  Earl  of  Desmond; 
he  d.  in  161 2.  In  1606  he  succeeded 
in  getting  his  castles  of  Kilbrittain,  etc., 
and  his  lands  settled  on  his  children, 
thus  robbing  his  Tanist  and  his 
sept.  His  mother  was  a  dau.  of  the 
Lord  of  Muskery;  his  sisters  were  mar. 
to  Butler  of  Kilcash,  Butler  of  Shian, 
McDonogh  Lord  of  Duhallow,  Fitz- 
Gerald  Lord  of  Decies,  and  M'Carthy 
of  Inniskeen,  Chief  of  Slught  Donogh. 
His  son  mar.  a  dau.  of  the  White 
Knight ;  his  dau.  were  wives  of  Lord 
Barry,  McCarthy  of  Dunmanway,  and 
McCarthyof  Ballykay.  In  1600  McCar- 
thy  Reagh  betrays  Florence.  '  The 
said  Florence  asked  McCarthie  Reaugh 
(they  twaine  standinge  in  the  windowe 
in  Kilbrittaine  Castell  next  to  the  sea) 
what  course  he  would  take  ?  M'Carthie 
made  answer  that  he  proposed  to 
houlde,  as  he  had  done,  on  her  Majesty's 
side.  Florence  made  answeare  and 
said,  take  heede  what  you  do  !  the 
Queene  is  not  able  to  overcome  us : 
trust  not  in  the  English,  for  they  are 
not  sound  among  themselves,  and  the 


Councill  is  divided,  and  no  man  knoweth 
it  better  than  I  do  ;  and  be  suere  that 
the  Irish  will  prevaile,'  etc.— AP  Cartliy 
Mor,  p.  239,  and  Cronelly. 

85  See  note  (cc).  He  was  killed  in  a 
skirmish  in  Connaught  in  1 601,  say  the 
Annals,  which  call  him  MTJonough,  i.e., 
Donough  Mac  Cormac  Oge,  McCor- 
mac. — p.  2231. 

There  were  also  the  Mac  Carthies  of 
Ballea,  of  Cloghroe,  of  Mourne  or  na 
Mona;  Teig-an-Fhorsa  McCarthy  Duna 
of  Gleanacroim,  who  i°  mar.  a  dau.  of 
M'Swiney,  Constable  of  Thomond,  and 
20  a  dau.  of  Rory  M'Sheehy. — See 
McCarthy  Mor,  and  Cronelly  s  Family 
History. 

Ilh  In  1582  the  Seneschal  of  Imokilly 
and  Gilla-Patrick  Condun  made  a  raid 
into  Roche's  country,  slew  his  sons 
Redmond  and  Theobald,  and  a  great 
number  of  the  chiefs  of  their  people 
and  of  their  chief  constables.  Theo- 
bald's wife  seeing  her  husband  mangled, 
shrieked  dreadfully,  'so  that  she  died 
that  night  alongside  the  body  of  her 
husband.'  In  a  second  raid,  at  All- 
hallowtide,  the  Seneschal  and  Patriccin 
Condun  slew  two  other  sons  of  Roche, 
and  only  fourteen  weaponed  men  of 
the  territory  outlived  the  engagement ! 
— Annals,  p.  1777. 

In  1 600,  Mac  Hawghe  Condon, 
chiefe  of  a  small  country,  submitted  to 
the  Queen.     In  1601,  O'Donnell  de- 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


179 


John  Fitz  Edmond.'' 
Seneshall  of  Imokellie.kk 


sires  Fineen  McCarthy  to  commend 
him  to  Patrick  Condon. — Pac.  Hib., 
pp.  62  and  302.  In  1591,  the  gentle- 
men of  Condon's  countrey  were,  Ed- 
mond  Gangahe;  Edmond  Og  Condon; 
Patrick  C. ;  Walter  C.  ;  Wm.  Edmond 
C. ;  and  Edmond  McJohn  C;  Richard 
Condon  alias  McMaoge,  Piers  Gold, 
and  Fynne  Monsloe. — Car.  CaL,  p. 
64. 

In  1598,  Cecil  writes — 'Certain  un- 
dertakers are  clamouring  for  the  lands 
of  Condon ;  let  this  chief  be  told  that 
his  land  shall  be  safe  from  them.' — 
Ml  Car  thy  Mor,  p.  168. 

'  Condon  was  brother-in-law  of  Lord 
Barry,  who  in  1605  informed  Lord 
Salisbury  that  Condon  was  descended 
of  the  ancient  English,  his  ancestors 
maintaining  their  lands  since  the  con- 
quest, and  was  near  allied  to  ancient 
English  in  general  in  the  Province  of 
Munster.'  Strange  to  say,  Condon's 
son,  David,  was  a  friend  of  Florence 
McCarthy,  the  enemy  of  his  uncle 
Barry,  and  with  the  Earl  of  Thomond 
and  others  was  surety  for  him  'in  ^250 
a-piece.' — Car.  CaL,  1605  ;  MCarthy 
Mor,  p.  399.  The  second  Earl  of 
Desmond  mar.  a  dau.  of  Lord  Condon. 
Patrick  Condon  of  Ballymac-Patrick 
mar.  Honora,  sister  of  David  Lord 
Barry,  who  lived  in  1598. — Lodge,  vol. 
i.,  pp.  63  and  293. 

In   1 59 1,  William,  son  of  Gerald  C. 


of  Cork-beg  sold  his  property  to  John 
FitzEdmond  de  Gerald  of  Cloyne ; 
near  Corkbeg  House  are  the  remains 
of  Condon's  castle. —  Windele's  South  of 
Ireland,  p.  T97. 

In  1605,  David  C.  describes  himself 
to  the  Secretary  of  State  as  '  Chief  of 
his  sept,  of  as  noble  a  house  of  English 
race  as  most  in  Ireland,  and  by  birth 
Baron  of  Ballyderrowen  ;  the  Lords  C. 
had  frequently  been  summoned  as 
Barons  to  Parliament— his  ancestors 
had  never  matched  but  with  Earls  or 
Barons.' 

"  I  cannot  make  out  who  he  is,  from 
the  Geraldine  Documents,  or  Calendar 
of  Carcw  Papers.  Perhaps  he  is  the 
Geraldine  under  note  (kk). 

"  See  supra  note  (hh).  Gentlemen  of 
the  barony  of  Imokillie  in  1592 — John 
FitzEdmond  Gerrald  ;  R.  Condon  ;  J. 
Ca  X  rew  (ms  mark) ;  Edmund  X  Su- 
pell  (his  mark) ;  Redmond  Maguier  ; 
Mastine  X  McPieris  (his  mark)  ;  Ed- 
mond Power;  Gerott  X  Condon  (his 
mark). — Car.  Cat.  In  1602,  'William 
McShane,  the  Seneschal's  son  of 
Imokilly,'  emigrated  to  Spain,  after  the 
battle  of  Kinsale.  The  daughter  of 
James  FitzMorris  mar.  John  FitzGerald, 
Seneschal  of  Imokilly,  and  2ly  Sir  Ed- 
mond, son  and  heir  of  Sir  J.  FitzGerald 
of  Cloyne  and  Ballymaloe.  In  1565, 
'  Gerald  Fitz  James  McSleyney,  Captain 
of  his  nacion  in  Imokilly  and  true  Lord 


l8o  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   T598. 

John  Fitz  Edmond"  of  Clone. 


of  Rostellan,  sold  unto  John  Fitz- 
Edmond  James  de  Geraldinis  his  manor 
of  Rosteilan.' — Windek,  p.  199. 

The  8th  and  last  Seneschal  of  Imo- 
killy  was  John  FitzEdmund  FitzGerald ; 
he  married  the  dau.  of  James  Fitz- 
Mauriceof  Desmond, 'the  Arch  Traytor.' 
His  son  Edmund  was  twelve  years  old 
in  1598.  His  sisters  were  married  to 
Condon  of  Corkbeg,  Sir  John  Fitz- 
Edmond,  and  R.  McBrien  McShee  ;  his 
illegitimate  son  was  in  Spain  in  1602. — 
Geraldine  Documents  in  Kilk.  Jour,  of 
Arch. 

"  '  A  man  very  famous  for  his  learn- 
ing and  liberall  hospitality  in  enter- 
taining of  strangers.' — Pac.  Hib.,-p.  63. 

A  '  Bastard  Geraldine,  a  man  of 
great  authority,  commissioner  of  the 
peace  and  quorum,  and  trusted  and  em- 
ployed in  causes  of  State;  he  has  ^1000 
revenue;  has  made  show  of  religion  and 
loyalty  and  affection  to  the  English  ; 
but  of  late  has  been  discovered  a  hippo- 
crite  and  a  traitor  ...  as  rebellious  and 
hateful  heart  towards  the  English  as 
any  Desmond  or  Tyrone.' — Justice 
Saxey  in  1597,  Car.  Cat.  In  1600, 
O'Neile  wrote  to  Edmond  Fitzjohn  and 
Thomas  Fitzjohn,  '  to  come  to  himself 
and  fight  for  your  conscience  and  the 
right.  And  if  you  do  not,  be  well 
assured  by  the  will  of  God  that  O'Neylle 
will  come  and  sojourn  with  you  for  a 
time  ; '  and  O'Neille  '  utterly  spoiled 
him.' — Car.  Cat.,  1600, pp.  363  and  364. 


FitzEdmund  was  Fyneen  McCarthy's 
godfather. — Careii^  in  McCarthy  Mor, 
p.  268.  After  the  victory  of  Kinsale 
the  Lord  Deputy,  the  night  that  he  left 
Cork,  lodged  at  Clone,  a  towne  and 
manor  house  sometime  belonging  to 
the  bishop  of  that  See,  but  now  passed 
in  Fee-farme  to  Master  John  Fitz-Ed- 
mond,  who  gave  cheereful  and  plentiful 
entertainment  to  his  Lordship  and  all 
such  of  the  Nobility,  Captaines,  and 
gentlemen,  and  others  as  attended  upon 
him — the  Deputy  did  honour  him  with 
the  Order  of  Knighthood  to  requite  his 
perpetual  loyalty,  etc. — Pac.  Hib.,  p. 

5°3- 

FitzEdmond   mar.   a  dau.    of  Lord 

Barry;  died  in  1612,  aged  82.  His 
monument,  with  effigies,  is  in  Cloyne 
cathedral.  He  had  four  brothers  ;  his 
sisters  were  married  to  Lord  Inchiquin 
and  Owen  M'Donal  O'Sullevan.  His 
family  vanished  with  his  great-grand- 
son. 

His  epitaph  runs  thus — 

Epitaphium  Johannis  de  Geraldinis 

Militis. 

Anno  Domini  161 1. 

Hie   situs  est   miles   magni   de  stirpe 

Giraldi, 
Aeterna  cujus  Patria  laude  sonat, 
Hospitio   Celebris,    doctrina   clarus   et 

arm  is  ; 
Digna  fuit  virtus  nobilitate  viri. 
Omnipotens   animam  rapiat  miseratus 

in  nltmn 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


1S1 


The  White  knightmm  called  Fitzgibbon. 

Sr  Thomas  of  Desmonds  Sone,nn  latelie  made  Earle  of 

Desmonde,  Capten  of  the  Rebellion  in   Moun- 

ster  raysed  in  October  last. 


Dura  haec   exanimum    marmora   cor- 
pus habet ; 
Illius  et  gesta  in  pace,   et  quam  plu- 

rima  bello 
Te  doceant  vivi,  lector  amice  vale. 

Obiit  prsedictus  Eques  anno  setatis 
85,  die  vero  mensis  Januarii  15,  anno 
Dni  161 2.  Sub  hoc  etiam  marmore 
requiescit  filius  cum  patre  qui  immatura 
morte  patri  praeivit  iter  anno  aetatis  43, 
die  vero  mensis  Martii  10,  anno  Dni 
161 2. — See  Geraldine  Documents  in  Kil. 
Jour,  of  Arch. 

mm  Edmond  FitzGibbon  alias  the 
White  Knight,  had  400  foot  and  30 
horse  in  1599  against  the  English. — 
Car.  Cal.  He  is  marked  '  very  dan- 
gerous' in  1588. 

In  1600,  Carevv  writes — 'The  White 
Knight  hath  sent  sundry  messages  to 
me  promising  to  submit  and  to  be  an 
honest  man.  A  more  faythlesse  man 
never  lived  upon  the  earthe  ...  if 
anything  do  move  him  to  keep  his 
promise,  it  is  the  internal  malice  be- 
tween James  McThomas  and  him, 
which  is  irreconciliable.'  He  was  a 
Geraldine,  a  born  follower  of  Fitz- 
Thomas  Earl  of  Desmond,  and  brother 
of  his  wife ;  and  yet  he  betrayed  him, 
and  took  him  prisoner  in  Slewgrott. 
And  Carew  says — '  I  protest  I  do  not 
know  any  man  m  Minister  but  himself 


by  whom  I  might  have  gotten  him.' 
The  White  Knight  got  ^1000  for  his 
service. 

'  The  name  of  the  White  Knight   shall  cease, 
and  his  race ; 
His  castle  down  fall,  roof  and  rafter  ! ' 

Aubrey  cle  Vere. 

In  1604,  the  King  orders  Edmund 
Fitzjohn  Oge  Gibbon,  alias  Gerald, 
called  the  White  Knight,  to  be  restored 
to  his  ancient  blood,  and  to  hold  in  fee- 
farm  for  ever  of  the  King,  Ould  Castle 
Town,  and  Michell's  Town  in  Cork  ; 
and,  as  he  hath  good  scope  of  land, 
...  to  be  countenanced  with  the  style 
of  Baron  of  Clangibbon. —  Car.  Cal. 

There  was  also  FitzGibbon  of  the 
half  barony  of  Kilmore,  near  Charle- 
ville — '  David  an-Chomhraic  (of  the 
combat)  FitzGibbon,  Lord  of  Coill-mor, 
died  in  1582.' — Annals. 

See  more  about  those  FitzGibbon  s 
in  the  Geraldine  Documents,  Kilk.  Arch. 
Journal,  4th  series,  p.  609. 

™  '  That  Archtraitor  and  usurping 
Earle'  of  Desmond,  writes  Carew,  was 
the  most  mightie  and  potent  Geraldine 
that  had  been  of  any  of  the  Earles  of 
Desmond  his  predecessors  ;  for  he  had 
8000  men  well  armed  under  his  com- 
mand at  one  time.' — Pac.  Hib.,  pp. 
250,  251.  See  notes  (mm)  and  infra  un- 
der 'the  Earls.'   He  had  a  brother  John  ; 


182 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   159S. 


Justice  Gold,00  second  Justice  of  Mounster. 
O'Sullivan  more.pp 

Also  sundrie  other  of  meaner  sort,  as — 
Barrhies.qq  Waters. 

Condoms.  Flemings. 


and  a  cousin  in  the  Tower  who  was  set 
up  as  Elizabeth's  Earl  of  Desmond. 

There  was  also  a  Geraldine  seated  at 
Prughus,  between  Charleville  and 
Tullylease. — Tribes  of  Ireland,  p.  69. 
Also  FitzGerald  of  Broghill— '  Red- 
mund  FitzGerald,  Lord  of  Tuath-Bro- 
thaill,  was  executed  in  1596  at  Cork 
for  .  .  .  insurrection.' — Annals,  p.  1997. 

00  James  Gold,  according  to  Chief 
Justice  Saxey,  'is  Second  Justice  of 
Munster  and  Recorder  of  Limerick  ; 
he  stands  indicted  seven  times  of  seve- 
ral high-treasons  which  for  several  years 
have  been  smothered,  but  lately  revealed 
to  me  by  Hugh  Cuffe,  Esquire.' — Car. 
Cal.,  1597,  p.  211. 

There  was  Philip  Gold  in  Kinalea, 
and  Piers  Gold  in  Condon's  country. 

pp  See  under  Kerry  and  supra  note  (*). 

qq  In  1585  the  members  for  Cork 
were  Norries,  Cogan,  and  T.  FitzEd- 
mond;  for  the  city,  Miagh  and  Sarsfield; 
for  Youghal,  Coppinger  and  J.  Collen  ; 
for  Kinsale,  Galway  and  Roche.  In 
1652,  there  were  in  the  city  of  Cork  38 
Goolds,  30  Roches,  22  Tyrries,  19 
Galways,  18  Meads,  18  Coppingers,  11 
Sarsfields,  11  Martels,  8  Morroghs,  5 
Skiddies,  5  Ronaynes ;  the  others  were, 
Walters,    Creaghs,    Meskills,    Fagans, 


Lombards,  Verdons,  Lavallyns,  Whytes, 
Hores,  etc. 

Thirty-nine  Gallways,  34  Skiddies, 
30  Golds,  29  Roches,  and  25  Tyrrys 
were  Mayors  of  Cork. — See  List  of 
Mayors  in  Hist,  of  Cork,  by  the  Nun 
of  Kenmare. 

Temp.  Henry  VI.,  the  Wynchedons 
(or  Nugents)  were  the  chief  family, 
their  head,  '  Chief  of  his  nacion,'  lived 
at  Aughavarten  Castle  (which  is  now  a 
fine  ruin  52  feet  high),  near  Carrigaline. 
The  Goolds  and  Sarsfields  had  also 
'Captains  of  their  nacion.' — Windele's 
South  of  Ireland,  pp.  6  and  196. 

The  County  Jury  of  1576  were — 
'  Martell  of  Martellston ;  Tchs  Barry  of 
Donboige;  Mallefunte  of  Courteston; 
Hoare  of  Money;  O'Mahowny  of  O'Ma- 
howne's  castle ;  Skiddie  of  Frissell  castle ; 
McO\ven  of  Drishane ;  O'Herlihie  of 
Ballycorny ;  James  Oge  Rooch  of 
Knyvre ;  Cogan  of  Ballenecourtey; 
Fynen  McCormac  of  Bellemclashy, 
gentlemen.' — M'Carthy  Mor,  p.  n. 

The  Jurors  who  acquitted  Wm-  Mead, 
Recorder  of  Cork  in  1603,  when  the 
Government  wanted  to  find  him  guilty 
of  High  Treason: — 1.  Richard  Fitz- 
David  Oge  Barrie  of  Robertstown,  Ar. 
2.  Thomas    Fitzjohn  Gerald  of   Res- 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


183 


Meaghes. 
Skiddies." 
Barrots.55 
Nugents." 

tellan,  gent.  3.  Wm  Power  of  Shan- 
garry,  gent.  4.  Gregorie  Lombart  of 
Bottevant,  gent.  5.  David  Nogle 
(Nagle)  of  Mondaumny,  gent.  6. 
Myles  Roche  of  Killeahie,  gent.  7. 
Donell  O'Donvaie  alias  O'Donvan  of 
Castle  Donovane,  gent.  8.  J.  Ronane 
of  Youghill,  gent.  9.  Nich.  Galwane 
of  Youghill,  gent.  10.  Mohenus 
JVTShehie  of  Killinetworragh  (Kilnat- 
oora),  gent.  11.  W"  Hadnett  of 
Ballyvoady.  12.  Donogh  Moel  (Moyle) 
McCarthy  of  Fiall,  gent.  Meade  was 
accused  of  refusing  to  recognise  James 
I.,  and  '  of  levying  war.'  The  Jurors 
who  were  present  at  the  indictment  of 
Meade  previously  were — O'Solivan  of 
Carrig,  gentleman;  Teig  M'Cormac 
Carty  of  Ballea ;  Tailor  of  Mallow  ; 
T.  Gaukaghe  of  Ishinegreagh  ;  Garret 
Boy  Barry  of  Ballyncourty ;  John  Barry 
alias  McAdam  of  Rathcormac;  T.  Barry 
alias  McAdam  of  Ballycloghie ;  Edmund 
McShane  McEdmund  of  Ballynecorry ; 
Hyde  of  Carrigyneady ;  Cahir  O'Cal- 
laghan  of  Dromynive;  Wm-  Mallesant 
of  Killeaghie  (Malefont?);  Bryan 
McOwen  of  Cloghdoe ;  Redmund  Mag- 
ner  of  Aghaddy;  Teig  McDermod 
M'Donnell  of  Knockilly;  Garret  Barrie 
of  Ballyregan,  gentlemen.' — Car.  CaL, 
1603,  p.  68. 
"  In  1596,  d.  Andrew  Skiddie,  pos- 


Goldes.uu 
Russells. 
Galloways. 


sessed  of  the  'North  Abbey  of  the  Friars 
of  Shandon.'  Skiddy's  Castle,  on  west 
of  North  Main  Street,  built  by  John 
Skiddyin  1445, was  demolished  in  1785. 
On  a  bell  in  Trinity  Church  is  inscribed 
— 'Andrew  Skiddie,  Mayor — R.  Pen- 
nington made  me  in  the  yeare  of  our 
Lordei62i.'  See  infra  Elinor  Roche, 
tice  Skiddy.  In  1594,  R.  Skyddye 
was  '  Chaplain  of  our  Ladye  Chapel;' 
in  1536,  Reen  ny  Skiddy  was  held  by 
R.  Skyddy,  'chief  of  his  nacion.'— 
Windele,  p.  181. 

ss  Barret,  the  '  chief  of  his  nacion,' 
owned  the  strong  castle  of  Ballincollig 
and  the  castles  of  Carrigrohan  and 
Castlemore  (which  are  now  ruins). 
Wm.  B.  of  Ballincollig,  'chief  of  a 
small  countrye,'  submitted  in  1599.' — 
Windele,  pp.  252-6.  In  16 12,  Andrew 
Barret  was  M.P.  for  co.  Cork.  In 
1588,  John  Fitzjames  Barrett,  Prior  of 
St.  Stephen's  by  Cork,  to  Wm.  Kyent 
of  Corck,  Sheareman,  and  Honory  ny 
Learie  his  wife,  two  beds  of  the  garden 
situate  in  the  Nard,  to  hold  for  50 
years,  at  the  rate  of  two  pence  yearly. 
The  prior  puts  '  his  mark.' —  Windele. 

"  Of  Ahamartha,  castle  still  standing, 
see  note  (qq). 

uu  See  note  (00). 

Ronayn  of  Ronayne's  Court.  A 
chimney-piece  bears  the  inscription — 


1 84 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Roches. vv 

Chief  Undertakers™  in  this  Countie: — 
Sir  Thomas  Norriesxx  L.  President. 


'Morris  Ronayn,  and  Margaret  Gould 
builded  this  house  in  the  yeare  of  our 
Lorde  1627,  and  in  the  3  yeare  of 
Kinge  Charles,  Love  God  and  Neigh- 
bors, M.R.  (I.H.S.)  M.G.' 

T.  Ronayne  of  Ronayne's  Court  was 
Mayor  of  Cork  in  1630.  This  family 
became  extinct  in  1798,  and  the  repre- 
sentative in  the  female  line  is  Sarsfield 
of  Ducloyne. 

In  1536,  Cogan  was  'Lord  of  the 
Manor  of  Bernyheylye  in  the  counties 
of  Kerrycurihy.' 

vv  Vide  Lord  Roche.  The  Roches 
had  in  1652  two  castles,  'the  Golden 
Castle '  inside,  and  '  Short  Castle '  out- 
side the  walls  of  Cork.  There  is  in 
Christ  Church  the  old  Roche  tomb  with 
the  words  still  visible — 'Jacobus  Roche. 
Also  a  tomb  of  'Morris  Roche  Fitz- 
James,  Alderman,  and  his  only  wife, 
Elenor  Roche,  alias  Skiddy,  this  being 
their  last  dwelling ; '  date  1634. 

There  is  an  anonymous  inscription 
on  another  tomb  in  Christ  Church — 

'  God's  peace  bee  with  yow  my  tow 
good  shisters,  Ellinor  and  Margarite. 
a.d.  1624.' — Windele,  p.  56. 

A  stone,  which  belonged  probably  to 
St.  Peter's  Church,  has  the  initials 
I.H.S.  'circled  with  a  glory,'  and  the 
inscription — '  Made  at  Cork  i  anno 
dni.  1586  xxiii.  June. 


'  SH)g  sucrreo  name,  ©  ILntB, 
(Encrtabc  foitfjin  mg  brcst, 
Sttfj  therein  ootfj  consist 
fHg  fatal  ano  nnln  rest.' 
W1V  Character  of  certain  English 
settlers.  'They  are  freed  from  three  of 
the  greatest  dangers  :  first,  they  cannot 
meet  in  all  that  land  (Ireland)  any 
worsse  than  themselves;  secondly,  they 
neednot  feare  robbing,  for,  that  they  have 
not  any  thing  to  lose ;  lastly,  they  are  not 
likely  to  rune  in  debte,  for  that  there  is 
none  will  trust  them.' — Description  of 
Ireland  in  1589  by  R.  Payne,  a  Settler. 
'  I  have  just  caus  to  be  agreavd  that 
Her  Majesty  is  abused  with  such  under- 
takers, I  associated  with  sutch  com- 
panions, and  an  honourable  accion 
disgraced  with  such  lewd,  indiscreet,  and 
insufficient  men.  .  .  .  My  dislike  of  the 
proceedings  hear  hath  drawn  upon  me 
the  enmitea  of  Sir  V.  Brown,  Sir  E. 
Denny,  and  others  of  that  sorte,  that 
measure  conscience  by  commodite,  and  law 
by  lust:— Sir  W.  Herbert  to  Burghley 
in  1588,  given  in  McCarthy  Mor,  pp. 

51,  52- 

"  In  June  1599,  General  Norreys, 
while,  charging  at  the  head  of  his 
cavalry,  the  troops  of  Burke  of  Castle- 
connell,  at  Kilteely,  was  pierced  through 
helmet  and  brain  by  John  Burke,  a 
Connaught  gentleman.  On  the  5th 
March    1600,    Maguire,    in   a   cavalry 


COUNTIE  OF  CORK. 


I85 


Hugh  Cuff. 

Sr  Walter  Raleigh. 

Sr  Christofor  Hatton's  heyre. 

Sr  Warrham  S'-  Leger's""  heyre. 

Sr  Ric.  Greenfield's  H  eyres. 
The    most  of  the  Iryshe  Gentlemen    of  this  Countie  are 
latelie  entered    in  Rebellion,  having  the  Noblemen  and  chief 
Captens    of  everie    nation.       The    nomber   of  their    Forces    I 
know  not.5'3' 

Castles*2  and   Howses  of  name  are  many  belonging  to  the 


skirmish,  'strake  Sir  Warham  St.  Leger 
through  the  brain.' 

In  1598,  Spencer  was  burned  out.of 
Kilcolman  Castle,  and  one  of  his 
children  perished  in  the  flames.  In 
the  following  year  he  died  in  London 
'for  lack  of  bread.'  This  'gentle,' 
poet  had  written  a  work  to  urge  the 
wholesale  starvation  of  the  Irish,  and  the 
burning  of  their  homesteads  and  crops. 
Undertakers  in  Cork  in  1589. 
@  id.  the  acre. 


Acres. 

Hugh  Cuffe  . 

12000 

Arthur  Hyde 

6000 

Phaare  Beacher     . 

12000 

Hugh  Worthe 

12000 

Sir  W.  St.  Leger  and 

Sir  R. 

Grynfield  . 

12000 

Arthur  Robyns 

4000 

George  Robynson 

4000 

Mr.  Read      . 

3000 

™  See  supra.     The 

' Sugaun 

'    Earl 

had  8000  men  well  armed  under  his 

command. — Pac.  Hib., 

p.  251. 

In  1599,  according  to  Moryson, 
Edmond    FitzGibbon,     the 

White  Knight,  had  .  400  f.  30  h. 
James    FitzThomas,    '  Earl 

of  Desmond'  .  .  250  f.  30  h. 
The  Lord  of  Dowallough  .  200  f.  8  h, 
Barry  Oge,  and  Lord  Barry's 

brother  in  the  Muskerye  120  f.    3  h. 
Davy  Burke  in  the  Carbrye  500  f. 
O'Sulevan  Beare,  O'Sulevan 

More's  country,  and  Der- 

mot  McOwen  usurping  the 

name  of  McCarthy  More  500  f.    6  h. 

The  Lord  President  reported  that 
'between  March  and  November  1600, 
he  had  slain  1200  weaponed  men,  be- 
sides husbandmen,  women,  and  children? 
— Life  of  McCarthy  Mor,  p.  315. 

"  'There  were  160  castles  in  Cork. 

Castles  in  Muskry  in  1600. — Blar- 
ney, Kilcrea,  Mocrompy,  Carrignavar. 
Castle  ny  Hinshy  with  Cormack's 
mother,  Castlemore  and  Carrignamuk 
with   Callaghan    McTeg,    Carrigdrohid 

2  A 


i86 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Noblemen  and  Gentlemen  of  the  Countrie  and  to  the  under- 
takers, the  chief  whereof  is  Moyallo,  latelie  Builded  by  Sr 
Thomas  Norries,  L.  President  of  Mounster. 


with  Sir  Cormac  McTeg's  widow ; 
Donogh  McCormoc  of  Cloghphilip ; 
Owen  Loghie  McSwyne  of  McShane- 
glasse ;  Brian  McOwen  Loghie  of 
Cloghda ;  O'Lery  of  Carrinecorragh 
and  Carrigneyleghe ;  Owen  McTeg 
Cartie  of  Carrigfalcaghe,  Drissan,  and 
Carrigepookie ;  Finin  M'Donal  Oge 
Cartie  of  Downdererige.  Septs  of  the 
Carties  in  Muskry — Clan  Cormac  Oge, 
Slucht  Decan,  Slught  Tuonedrum, 
Slucht  Cloghroe,  the  Sept  of  Clanfad- 
daghe,  Sept  of  Shane  Killie.  Septs  of 
Freeholders — O'Lery  and  O'Mahons. 
The  'followers'  were — Riordens,  Moro- 
hoes,  Clancallogans,  McSwynes.  'The 
countries'  were — O'Healies,  O'Herlies, 
O'Long,  O'Cronin  ;  Hegans  (brehons), 
Aulyves  or  O'Levies  (surgeons),  O'Dal- 
lies  (rimers),  O'Donins  (chroniclers). — 
Car.  Ceil.,  an.  1600,  p.  152. 

In  Carbrie  in  1599  were — McCarthy 
V:  cogh  of  Kilbrittain,  etc.  ;  O'Mahon 
Fun  (Fionn)  of  Evaugh ;  O'Driscoll 
Mor  of  Collymore,  and  O'Driscoll  Oge 
of  Collybeg;  O'Donovan  of  Clancahell; 
O'Dally  of  Munster-Vary ;  O'Crowly 
of  Killshallow;  O'Murrihie  of  Bally- 
widdan ;  O'Mahon  Carbery  of  Kinal- 
meaky  (escheated). — Car.    Cat.,  year 

!599>  P-  351- 

O'Learys  owned  the  castles  of  Dun- 
darierk,    Carrigafooky,    Carrignaneela, 


Drumcarra,  and  Carrignacurra  (pos- 
sessed by  Dermod  Oge  O'Leary  in  1 588, 
and  said  by  Smith  to  be  100  f.  high). 
The  pass  of  Keim-an-eigh  separated  the 
territory  of  O'Leary  (Ibh-Leary)  from 
O'Sullevan's  lands. 

In  1600,  the  O'Learies,  to  the  num- 
ber of  100,  attacked  the  Carties  of 
Carbery,  and  after  a  sharp  skirmish, 
O'Lery,  Head  of  that  Sept,  was  slain, 
and  10  other  the  chiefe  of  his  family, 
with  some  more  of  lesse  note.' — Pac. 
Bib.,  p.  171.  O'Mahony's  castle  and 
his  lands  of  Kinalmeaky  for  several 
miles  on  both  sides  of  the  Bandon 
river  were  granted  to  Beecher  and 
Grenville. 

The  McSwineys  built  Castlemore 
circa  1598.  They  lived  at  the  Castle 
of  Cloghda,  a  solid  keep  40  feet  high 
with  projecting  battlement.  They 
owned  also  Mushanaglass,  and  Castle 
McDermod  Oge. —  Windele. 

Castle  Donovan  or  Sowagh,  a  tall 
square  keep  with  crenellated  battle- 
ments, and  projecting  defences  at  the 
angles.  Donal  O'Donovan  of  this 
place  got  a  regrant  from  James  I.  by 
English  tenure  of  this  castle,  and  a 
large  extent  of  territory.  Copious 
and  curious  details  about  this  O'Dono- 
van, Chief  of  Clancahill,  are  given  in 
the  Annals  and  Hy-Fiachra. 


COUNTIE  OF  KERRIE. 


I87 


THE    COUNTIE    OF    KERRIE. 

This  Countiea  properlie  contayneth  onlie  that  Land  which 
Lyeth    between    the   River  of  Mayne    and    the  Sheynen,   and 


*  Desmond  is  a  parcel  of  the  countrie 
of  Kerry,  and  is  divided  into  three 
baronies  and  a  half,  viz.,  Magonny, 
Iuragha,  Dunkerran,  and  the  half  barony 
of  Glanaroghto.  In  the  north  side  it 
is  bounded  by  the  river  Mang,  which 
doeth  divide  Desmond  from  the  rest  of 
Kerry.  The  south  part  doeth  bound 
with  certain  mountains  of  Bear  and 
Bantry,  beginning  from  Kilmallocko- 
shista,  and  continuing  to  O'Leary  and 
O'Donovan's  lands  in  the  Co.  of  Corke 
in  the  mountain  of  Sleughlogher,  and 
are  divided  by  the  head  of  the  rive  of 
Blackwater ;  the  rest  of  Desmond  is 
bounded  by  the  main  ocean  sea. 

The  chief  castles  were  the  Palace, 
Bally  Carbry  and  Castle  Logh. — Careiu 
MSS.,  quoted  in  M-Carthy  Mor,  p. 
221. 

There  are  in  the  Lambeth  Library 
some  maps  of  the  baronies  of  Kerry 
which  were  made  circ.  1598.  In  them 
the  following  places  are  marked  : — 

I.  '  Island  of  Dariry  (Valentia)  and 
haven  of  Bealinche  and  Beginnis — 1. 
Slucht  Cormack's  land.  2.  Part  of 
Sluch  Donnell  Brick's  land.  3.  Part 
of  Earl  of  Clancar's  land. 


II.  '  Half  barony  of  Glaneroght — 
1.  MTyneen's  lande.  2.  PartofMcGil- 
licuddies'  land.  3.  Lands  of  Niddin 
Clan  Tiege  Kittagh.  4.  Clandermot's 
land.  5.  A  quarter  of  the  Bishop  of 
Cork's  land.  6.  A  Sept  of  the  O'Sule 
van  Beare.  7.  Another  Sept  of  the 
O'Sullivan's.  8.  O'Griffin's  lande  and 
part  of  the  Prior  of  Inisfallen's  land. 
9.  Philip  O'Sullivan's  land.  10. 
McFineen  Duff's  land. 

III.  'Barony  of  Iveragh — 1.  O'Sul- 
livan  Mor's  lande.  2.  Slught  Donell 
Brick's  land.  3.  Slught  nyne  Rud- 
derie's  lande.  4.  Part  of  McCarthy's 
lande  in  Donell  McCarthy's  possession, 
|J«  Priory  of  Ballinskelligs.  5.  Lands 
of  Ballycarbery,  in  Brown's  possession. 
6.  Clan  Crohan's  lande.  7.  Slught 
Cormac  of  Dunguile's  lande.  8.  Slught 
Owen  Mor  of  Coshmang's  land.  9. 
Clandonell  Fin's  land,  and  part  of  Earl 
of  Clancarthy's  land,  in  Donnell  McCar- 
thy's  possession.  10.  Lands  of  Bally- 
carbery, in  Denny's  possession. 

IV.  '  Barony  of  Magonihy — 1.  Glan- 
fleske  or  O'Donoghoe  Glan's  lande.  2. 
Onaght  or  O'Donoghoe  Mdr's,  and 
Slught  Owen  Mor's  lande,  now  Browne's 


i88 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


includeth  the  most  part  of  the  mountaine  of  Shewroyher, 
which  mountaine  being  the  most  Easterlie  part  of  this  Countie, 
boundeth  it  upon  the  Counties  of  Limerick  and  Corke  to  the 
East,  upon  the  Sheynen  to  the  North,  upon  the  Sea  to  the  West, 
and  the  River  of  Mayne  to  the  South. 


seignory  lande.  3.  Kilegy,  part  of  the 
Earl's  lande,  now  in  Donal  M'Carthy's 
possession.  4.  Castle  Lough,  part  of  the 
Earl's  lande.  5.  Part  of  McFineen's 
land.  6.  Slught  Fineen  Duffe'slande.  7. 
Slught  Murry's  (Moriarty's)  land.  8. 
Slught  Cormock  of  Dunguile's  land. 
9.  Clandonnell  Fin's  lande.  10.  Part 
of  McCrohan's  lande.  11.  Killorgan 
and  other  landes  of  Conways.  12.  The 
Knight  of  Kerry's  lands.  13.  Lands 
of  the  Abbey  of  Killaha. 

V.  'Barony  of Dunkerron — 1.  M'Gil- 
licuddy's  land.  2.  McFineen's  land. 
3.  The  Priory  of  Ahamon's  land.  4. 
O'Sullivan  Mor's  lande.  5.  Slught  Cor- 
mock of  Dunguile's  land  (M'Carthy's). 
6.  Part  of  the  Earl  of  Clancor's  land, 
in  his  wife's  possession.' — Miss  Hick- 
son's  Kerry  Records,  p.  254,  2nd  series. 

O'Donochoe  More's  countrey  of  45 
ploughlands  is  now  in  McCarthy  More's 
hands.  The  Lord  of  Cosmaigne's 
countrey  of  84  ploughlands  in  his  hands 
also.  The  Lord  of  Kerslawny's  coun- 
trey, otherwise  called  Slight  Cormak, 
conteyneth  35  ploughlands,  whereof 
some  are  in  the  He  of  Valentia. 
McCarthy  Mor  claymeth  there  the 
geaving  of  the  Rodd,  Risinge  out,  the 
findinge  of  40  Galleyglas,  and  to  the 


value  of  jQnp  stg.  a  yeare  in  spendinge. 

The  countrey  of  [Mac]  Gelecudde' 
contayneth  46  ploughlands.  He  claym- 
eth there  Risinge  out,  thegevinge  of  the 
Rodde,  the  findinge  of  30  Galleyglas, 
Risinge  out  and  to  the  value  ,£20  a 
yeare  in  spendinge. 

Mac  Fynin's  countrey  in  Glenaraught 
contayneth  28  ploughlands.  McCarthy 
Mor  claymeth  the  givinge  of  the  Rodd, 
the  findinge  of  15  Galleyglas,  Risinge 
out,  and  to  the  value  of  ,£24  yearly  in 
spendinge. 

The  countrey  of  Clandonoroe  con- 
tayneth 24  ploughlands.  McCarthy 
More  claymeth  theare  risinge  out,  and 
it  is  in  the  Erie's  hands  by  Her  M*5 
Gyfte. 

The  eleventh  is  the  countrey  of 
O'Donocho  Glan  (O'Donoghue  of 
Glenflesk  in  Kerry).  He  hath  there 
no  other  dutie  but  onlly  six  and  fortie 
shillings  fourpence  of  yearlie  Rent. 
The  countrey  conteyneth  20  plough- 
lands. 

The  twelfth  is  the  countrey  of  Clan 
Dermonde.  It  conteyneth  28  plough- 
lands.  He  claymeth  Risinge  out,  the 
keepinge  of  16  Galleyglas,  and  in  yearly 
spendinge  to  the  value  of  ^40. 

'The    countrey    of    Loughlegh    or 


COUNTIE  OF  KERRIE. 


189 


Principall         Ardfert. 
Townes  Dingley,b  a  walled  Towne. 

Traley. 
Castles"  Hand  belonging  to  Sr  Willm  Harbert. 

Castle  mayne  to  the  Quene. 

Carrigfoylec  to  John  O'Connor. 


Teignitowin  contains  32  ploughlands. 
M'Carthy  Mor  claymeth  it  to  be  ex- 
cheated  to  him  for  want  of  heirs  right 
and  legitimate. — McCarthy  Mor,  p.  32. 

b  '  The  chief  towne  in  all  that  part  of 
Ireland.  It  consisteth  of  one  main 
street,  hath  gates,  as  it  seemeth  at  ether 
end  to  open  and  shut  as  a  town  of  war, 
and  a  castle  also.  The  houses  are  very 
strong  built,  with  strong  thick  walls  and 
narrow  windows,  and  like  unto  castles ; 
and  all  the  houses  in  the  town  were 
burned  and  ruined  by  the  Earl  of  Des- 
mond .  .  .  There  remaineth  yet  a 
thick  stone  wall,  that  passeth  overthwart 
the  middle  of  the  street,  which  was  a 
part  of  their  fortification  ...  we  had 
good  muttons,  though  less  than  ours  in 
England,  for  2  shillings  or  5  groats  a 
piece  ;  good  pigs  and  hens  for  3  pence 
a  piece.  We  were  entertained  at  the 
Sovereign's  house,  one  of  the  four  that 
withstood  the  Earl  of  Desmond.' — 
English  Narrative  written  circ.  1598, 
given  at  p.  235  of  Hist,  of  Kerry,  by  the 
Nun  of  Kenmare. 

Concerning  Dingle,  Hakluyt's  Chro- 
nicle, edited  in  1599,  says — 'That  part 
is  full  of  great  mountaines  and  hills  from 
whence  came  running  down  the  pleasant 


streams.  The  natural  hardness  of  that 
nacion  appeareth  in  this,  that  their 
small  children  runne  usually  in  the  win- 
ter up  and  down  barefootte  and  bare- 
legged with  many  a  times  only  a  mantle 
to  cover  them.  The  chiefe  officer  of 
the  town  they  call  their  Souvereyne. 
In  1585  it  got  the  same  privileges  as 
Drogheda.  In  1592  R.  Traunt  was 
Sovereign  of  Dingle,  the  other  gentle 
men  in  or  near  it  were  Stephen  Rice, 
Conway  N.  Browne,  Pattinson  (agent  to 
Denny),  Gerot  Duff  Stack,  N.  Traunt, 
and  O'Sulevan  Beare. 

Dingle  belonged  to  Knight  of  Kerry. 
He  was  beaten  by  Wilmot  at  Ballina- 
howe  (a  place  belonging  to  Edmund 
Hussey),  and  he  lost  Dingle  and  the 
Castles  of  Gregorie  and  Rahinane. 

Trant  and  Hussey  were  members  for 
Dingle  in  1613,  and  the  Trants,  Rices, 
and  Husseys  monopolised  the  repre- 
sentation till  1641. — Miss  Hickson, 
p.  158. 

There  were  12  or  13  castles  in  the 
one  small  barony  of  Carcaguiny,  and 
there  must  have  been  much  more  than 
30  in  all  Kerry;  perhaps  there  were  90. 
— A  writer  in  the  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

e '  Carrigafoyle,   chief  seat   of  John 


190 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Lixnawd  to  the  L:  thereof. 
Tarbert  to  the  Quene. 
Ardfertd  to  the  L:  of  Lixnaw. 
Traley  to   Sr   Edward   Dennye 
Ingland. 


in  the   court   of 


O'Connor  Kerry,  who  owned  also  the 
Castle  of  Ardee.' — Smith's  Kerry. 

This  was  John  na-Cathac  (or  of  the 
conflicts),  son  of  Conor  O'Connor  and 
Honoria,  a  dau.  of  the  2d  Earl  of  Tho- 
mond.  He  d.  in  1640,  leaving  no  sur- 
viving male  issue  by  his  wife,  a  dau.  of 
O'Sullevan  Mor ;  his  sister  Ellen  mar. 
FitzMaurice  of  Ballykiely;  his  daughters 
mar.  the  Knight  of  Glynn,  Oliver  Dela- 
hoyde,  and  Ulick  Roche. — Hist,  of 
Kerry,  by  Nun  of  Ken  ma  re,  p.  vii. 

However,  Fineen  M'Carthy  Mor 
repeatedly  calls  O'Connor  his  nephew. 
Carrigafoyle  was  the  '  strongest  castle  in 
all  Kerry.'—  Car.  Cat.,p.  412,  year  1600. 

d  'Also  Listowel.  Ballykeely  belonged 
to  James  FitzMaurice,  Castle  Drum  to 
Moriarty,  Dunkerron  to  O'Sullivan 
Mor,  Dunloe  to  Daniel  O'Sullevan, 
Dingle  to  Hussey,  Gallerus  to  the 
Knight  of  Kerry,  Cahir  Trant  to  Trant.' 
— Smith's  Kerry. 

'  The  O'Connells  were  Constables  of 
the  Castle  of  Ballycarbrey,  near  Cahir- 
civeen,  for  McCarthy  Mor.  Richard 
O'Connell,  ancestor  of  "the  Liberator," 
fought  against  the  Earl  of  Desmond, 
surrendered  his  estates,  and  obtained  a 
regrant  of  his  lands.  He  mar.  a  dau. 
of  McCarthy  of  Carrignamult,  in  Co.  of 


Cork ;  his  son  Maurice  was  High  Sheriff 
of  Kerry.' — The  Nun  of  Ken  ma  re,  p.  x. 
e  Ned  Denny,  as  Lord  Grey  calls  him 
in  his  despatch,  distinguished  himself  at 
the  head  of  his  company  at  Fort  del- 
Ore,  in  Nov.  1580.  In  the  Sep'  of 
that  year  he  wrote,  '  The  service  here  in 
boggs,  glumes,  and  woods  might  better 
fit  mastives  than  brave  gentlemen  that 
desire  to  win  honour.'  Yet  he  got  the 
honour  of  Knighthood  at  Fort  del-Ore, 
and  a  claim  on  the  Desmond  estates. 
His  epitaph  is  in  Waltham  Abbey — '  He 
took  his  deadly  sicknesse  in  the  service  of 
his  countrie,  and  died  the  13th  of  Feb. 
1599.' — p.  141  of  Kerry  Records. 
1 See  infra,  the  'Peers 'and  'Bishops.' 
A  map  of  Munster  in  1 608,  dedicated 
to  Cecil,  has  appended  to  it — 'Lists  of 
men  of  note  : — McFineen  at  Ardtully, 
M'Eligot  at  Ballymac  Eligot,  John 
McUlick  at  Castle  of  O'Brenan,  McShane 
at  Mornigane,  Donel  McFun  at  Tybrid, 
MacGellecudde  at  Boddesmeen,  Donell 
McMoriertagh  at  Castle  Drym,  McTir- 
logh  at  Balingown,  McGray  at  Tarmin 
McGray,  Fitzjohn  de  Lickfournea, 
FitzMoris  at  Lixnaw,  Brown  at  Brown- 
ogh,  Herbert  at  Clonnmillane,  Hussaye 
at  Castle  Gregorie,  Trant  at  Caer  Trant, 
Thomas  Oge  at  Ardnagragh,  Gray  of 


COUNTIE  OF  KERRIE. 


191 


Priiuipall         The   Baron    of   Lixnawf   commonlie    called    the 
Men  L:    Fitzmorrice,    his    name    is    PatrickFitz- 

gerrald,  his  chief  Hous  Lixnaw. 
The  Bishop  of  Ardfert/ 
Fitzgerralds  Knight  of  Kerrie. 


Liscahane,  Raymond  Oge.' — Kerry 
Records,  p.  281,  1st  series. 

The  English  descent  in  Kerry,  given 
by  Carevv  : — 'Lixnaw,  Knight  of  Kerry, 
Bishop  of  Ardfert;  Hussey,  Chief  of  his 
name;  Hores,  Rices,  Browne,  John  Oge 
of  the  Island  and  his  sept ;  McHenrys. 
Mere  Irish: — Moriertaghs,  O'Conor 
Kerrie,  MacHeligots.' 

In  1592,  in  the  'barony  and  half  ba- 
rony of  Clanmorris  lived  Pa.  Lyksnaw, 
and  John  X  Piers  (his  mark) ;  in  the  three 
baronies  of  Trughnacmye,  Brownlon- 
clone,  and  Offerbuye,  and  the  barony 
of  Corcaguinny,  were — Rich.  Trantte 
("suffrain"  of  Dinglecouishe),  John 
FitzEdward  Gerald,  M.  Brown,  Stephen 
Ryce,  Gerald  FitzMorish,  R.  Pattinson 
(agent  for  Denny),  J.  Traunt,  Jenkyn 
Conway,  Gerott  Duff  Stack,  T.  X  McEd- 
mond  (mark),  J.  McThomas  Mc  X  Shane 
(mark),  Moris  Mc  X  Ulick  (mark),  John 
X  McUlick  (mark),  R.  Trauntt,  M. 
Traunt,  John  Morish,  Nich.  Brown, 
Owen  O'Suilevan  X  olios  O'Suilevan 
Beery  (his  mark),  Dermod  X  O'Swile- 
van  (his  mark).' — Car.  Cat.,  year  1592. 

s  William  FitzGerald,  9th  Knight  of 
Kerry,  living  in  1599,  was  of  Rathannan 
and  Inismore ;  had  married  a  lady,  of 
the  family  of  Tobyn,  who  was  widow  of 


Morogh  McShee.  He  was  son  of  John 
the  8th  Knight,  and  of  Shela,  dau.  of 
O'Suilevan  More.  His  brothers  were 
Maurice,  Patrick,  Gerald,  of  whom 
Maurice  was  in  the  service  of  Spain  in 
1605.  His  sisters'  husbands  were — 
FitzGerald  Oge  of  Kilmacow,  and  Teig 
O'Driscoll.  From  him  is  descended  the 
Knight  of  Kerry,  qui  nunc  est.' — Gcral- 
dine  Documents  in  the  Kit.  Jour,  of  Arch.; 
and  Pedigree  in  the  Records  of  Kerry. 

'  The  Lord  FitzMaurice  hath  some 
200  foot.  TheKnight  of  Kerry  hathjoo, 
and  a  dozen  horsemen  on  a  sudden,  and 
100  foot  more  on  3  or  4  days'  warninge. 
He  is  my  cousene,  .  .  .  but  the  hard 
usage  of  my  nephew,  O'Conor  of  Kerry, 
doth  make  a  great  number  loathe  to  be 
persuaded  by  me.' — Flor.  M'Carthy 
Mor ;  see  his  Life,  p.  291. 

In  1600,  Wilmot,  Governor  of  Kerry, 
being  conducted  to  the  Quarter  of  the 
Knight  of  Kerry  in  the  night,  killed 
40  of  his  men,  took  500  cowes,  200 
garrans,  two  moneths'  provisions  of 
meale  and  butter  for  his  soldiers. 
Thereby  being  disfumished  of  all  his 
provision  for  his  followers,  he  submitted; 
Thomas  Oge,  of  the  Island,  and  Donal, 
son  of  O'Suilevan  Mor,  followed  his 
example. — Pac.  Hib.,  652. 


192 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Trauntsh  of  the  Dingle. 

Nic:  Browne.' 

James  oge  Perce.k 

The  Stackes,1  a  great  name. 


h  The  members  for  the  borough  of 
Dingle  in  16 13  were  Thomas  Trant 
and  Michael  Hussey.  See  supra  about 
the  Trants.  'One  Traunt  of  the 
Dingle  went  to  Spain  with  O'Sullivan 
Beare's  son  after  the  battle  of  Kinsale.' 
— Pac.  Mb. 

The    Rices    were    a    distinguished 
Dingle  family.     About  20  of  them  for- 
feited in   1 64 1,  in  the  barony  of  Cor- 
caguiny.     Piers  Rice  of  Dingle  owned 
'a  perty  castle'  in  1580;  Dominick  R. 
of  Dingle  d.  in  1592,  and  his  son  had 
livery  of  his  estates  in  1603.     Stephen 
R.    of  Ballinruddel   was  with    Daniel 
O'Sullevan     of    Dunlogh,     M.P.     for 
Kerry  in   1613.     His  broken  grave  is 
in  Dingle  churchyard,  with  the  inscrip- 
tion (now  fast  becoming  illegible) — 
'  Stephen  Rice,  Esquire,  lies  here, 
Late  Knight  of  Parliamente  ; 
A  happie  life  for  fourscore  yeare 

Full  virtuously  he  spente. 
His  loyal  wife,  Helena  Trante, 

Who  died  five  years  before, 
Lies  here  also — Lord  Jesus  grante 
Them  life  for  evermore. 
MDCXXIL' 
—  The  Nun  of  Kenmare' s  Kerry,  p.  xxiii. 

Also,  there  were  men  of  note,  named 
'TheFerritorand  Hubbers.' — Car.  Cal., 
1603,  p.  452. 

In  Ballyoughtra  churchyard  there  is 
a   tombstone   with    the    inscription — 


'I.H.S.  Nagle.  Ptt  LM  Terry  1551. 
A"  L"  Ferriter  1642.  .  .  .  Pray  for  us.' 
— Kerry  Records,  1st  ser.,  p.  259. 

In  1 64 1  Lady  Kerry  wrote — '  To  my 
very  loveing  friend,  Mr.  Piers  Ferriter, 
at  Ferriter's  towne,'  asking  him  to  leave 
'  Florence  McFineen  and  the  rest  of 
that  rebellious  crue.' — Nun  of  Kenmare, 
p.  246.  This  Piers  wrote  an  Irish 
Coaine  on  the  Knight  of  Kerry,  which 
has  been  translated  by  Crofton  Croker. 

1  Sir  Nicholas  Browne,  '  of  Molahaff,' 
ancestor  of  the  Earl  of  Kenmare,  son 
of  Sir  V.  Browne,  and  Thomasine,  dau. 
of  Sir  N.  Bacon,  Keeper  of  the  Great 
Seal.  He  mar.  a  dau.  of  O'Sullevan 
Beare;  he  d.  in  16 16. — See  a  great 
deal  about  him  in  Life  of  M'Carthy 
Mor.  Sir  Nicholas'  daughters  mar. 
two  sons  of  O'Sullevan  Mor. — Nun  of 
Kenmare. 

k  In  the  articles  between  the  Govern- 
ment Commissioners  and  the  Lord 
Fitz  Morish,  and  the  gentlemen  of  the 
country  of  Clanmorris  in  1592,  the 
only  names  are  '  Pa.  Lyksnawe '  (Lord 
of  Kerry)  and  'John  X  Oge  piers'  (his 
mark).  I  presume  James  was  his 
brother,  and  that  they  were  Fitz 
Maurices. — Car.  Cal.,  p.  67. 

1  '  Nations  chiefly  noted  as  procurers 
of  mischief  in  Kerry  and   Desmond  : 


COUNTIE  OF  KERRIE. 


193 


Mr.  Conway. 


McKelgot." 


The  Clantey  McGagh  and  the  Stacks, 
saving  Morrice  Stack  and  his  brothers. 
Meet  instruments  to  be  employed  in 
Kerry — Morrice  Stack  and  his  brothers, 
John  Rice,  Donal  Faries,  R.  Rice. — 
Car.  Cal.,  1596,  p.  203. 

In  1603,  'McMorris  himself,  Gerrott 
Roe  Stacke,  Donal  O'Swillivan  More, 
Hussey  the  Scholar,'  were  blockaded  in 
the  castle  of  Ballingarry  in  Clanmorris. 

'  Maurice  Stack,  a  man  of  small 
stature  but  invincible  courage,  with  50 
men,  surprised  by  scale  the  castle  of 
Liscaghan,  put  the  ward  to  the  sword, 
burnt  Ardare  and  other  towns.  Before 
this  none  of  her  Majesty's  forces  had 
been  seen  in  Kerrie.  The  country 
was  strong  in  men,  and  full  of  victuals, 
yet  this  undaunted  spirit  of  Stack  (a 
native  of  that  countrey),  with  a  hand- 
ful of  men  attempted  the  enterprize.' 

Maurice  was  invited  to  dine  by  Lady 
Lixnaw  in  her  husband's  castle  of  Beau- 
liew,  at  which  time  her  brother,  Donal 
O'Brien,  brother  of  the  Earle  of  Tho- 
mond,  was  with  her.  The  young  lady 
cried  out  unto  Dermond  Keugh  McCor- 
man,  Wm-  O'donichan,  and  Edmund 
O'heher — '  Doe  you  not  heare  him 
misuse  me  in  words  ? '  Whereupon 
they  with  their  skenes  murdered  him. 
— Pac.  Hib.,  pp.  i2i,  122,  143,  144. 

mSee  in  the  Kerry  Records  some 
details  about  the  Conways.  Browne 
and  Denny  and  Herbert,  and  these  six 
gentlemen  were  adventurers  or  under- 


takers. Sir  Wra-  Herbert  speaks  of  his 
fellow-undertakers  in  no  complimentary 
terms — as  'men  who  measure  con- 
science by  commoditie  and  law  by  lust.' 
Undertakers  in  1589  in  Kerry  and 
Desmond,  @  8d.  per  acre. 

Acres.      People.       Rent. 

Sir  Valentine  Brown  6000  20  j£ioo 
Sir  Edwd.  Denny   .  6000      ,,  100 

Sir  William  Herbert 

and   Sir   Charles 

Herbert     .         .  18,000    „         300 

"  McEligott  or  McGillicuddy.  In  the 
parish  of  Ballymac  Elligot  there  were 
three  castles  of  the  McElligotts — Carrig- 
nafeela,  Arabella,  and  Bernagrillagh. 
In  1613  the  lands  of  Ulick  McEligott 
attainted  were  given  to  Sir  T.  Roper. 
A  Colonel  Roger  McElligott  com- 
manded a  Kerry  regiment  in  England 
under  James  II. — Nun  of  Kenmare  and 
D' Alton's  Army  List. 

There  was  also  a  '  McGillicuddy, 
Lord  of  the  Reeks.'  Donogh  McDer- 
mot  O'Sulevan,  alias  McGillycuddy  of 
Bodevysmine  was  slain  in  the  Desmond 
wars ;  his  territory  was  granted  to  Ed- 
mund Barret  in  1595,  who  conveyed 
them  to  Edward  Hussey;  and  in  1598 
Hussey  conveyed  them  to  '  Donogh 
MTJermody,  alias  McGillycuddy  of 
Bodenesmeen.  Donogh  had  a  son 
Conor  of  Castlecurrig,  who  mar.  a  dau. 
of  John  Crosby  (alias  McCrossan), 
Protestant  Bishop  of  Ardfert.  Conor 
had  for  his  second  wife  a  dau.  of  Daniel 


194 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Mr.  Grey. 
Mr.  Spring. 
John  Burtall. 
John  Middelton. 


Oconnor  Kerrie.0 

and    many   other    meane 
Freeholders. 


Oge  Carty  of  Dunguile  ;  in  1630  he  d. 
by  shipwreck. — Mac  Gillicuddy  Papers, 
p.  xviii. 

There  were  also  Thomas  Oge  of 
Ardnagreagh,  Hussey  of  Ballynahowe, 
Owen  McMoriarty  of  Skeart,  McBrien 
of  Tralee,  Fitzjohn  of  Ballykely. — See 
supra,  p.  157. 

Over  a  niche  in  Muckross  Abbey  is 
inscribed  on  a  slab — 'Orate  pro  Donaldo 
MacFinin,  et  Elizabetha  Stephens,  O. 
An°  1631.     Q.S.H.F.F.'—  Windele,  p. 

434- 

"See  in  the  Historia  Catholica  of 
O'Siillevan  Beare  an  account  of  the 
sufferings  and  heroism  of  O'Connor 
Kerry  in  his  march  from  Munster  into 
O'Rorke's  country.  T/ie  Annals,  p. 
2095,  say  that  'in  August  1599  was 
slain  the  son  of  Conor  Ciarraighc 
(Donagh-Maol,  son  of  Conor,  son  of 
Conor,  son  of  John)  by  a  party  of  the 
soldiers  of  the  Earl  of  Desmond, 
namely,  by  the  sons  of  Manus  Oge 
McSheehy.  This  was  a  great  loss,  for 
O'Conor  himself  (i.e.  John)  was  his 
ally  in  war,  as  was  his  brother,  this 
Donogh,  and  all  who  were  in  their 
territory.' 

There  was  also  Hore  of  Castle- 
gregory,  in  the  'barony  of  Corcaguiny  ; 
he  was  lampooned  by  Aenghus  O'Daly. 


In  161 2  the  collectors  in  the  baronies 
for  the  building  of  Tralee  were  V. 
Browne  for  Magonihies,  Hardinge  for 
Iveragh,  John  O'Conor  of  Eraght, 
Croneen  for  Clanmaurice,  Bowdler  for 
Trughenackmie,  MTinnan  for  Glen- 
erought,  Daniel  O'Sullivan  for  Dun- 
kernan,  Wm-  FitzGerald  for  Corcaguiny 
or  Letterogh. 

Jurors  at  Tralee  in  1622 — MTJon- 
nell  of  Castle  Dunn,  Coursey  of  Bally- 
ronan,  Roche  of  Lachabane,  Offaly  of 
Lisnagoun,  O'Callaghan  of  Ballyvidane, 
Morris  of  Urly,  Garret  Oge  Brennagh 
of  Ardfert,  Owen  Oge  Carthy  of  Drom- 
keare,  Moore  of  Cauncaum,  Trante  of 
Dingly  Coist,  McCormac  of  Litter, 
McCrohan,  Fitzjames  of  Litters, 
M'Owen  of  Ballingamboon,  Mac  An- 
drew of  Ardfert,  McDonogh  Cullen  of 
Ballybristine. — Nun   of  Kcnmare,   pp. 

239,  243- 

Though  mentioned  only  under  Cork 
in  our  MS.,  the  chief  men  in  Kerry 
were  McCarthyM6r  and  O'Sullevan  Mor. 

An  inscription  carved  on  a  chimney- 
piece  preserved  in  a  house  attached  to 
Dunkerron  Castle  in  Kerry  runs  thus — 
'IHS.  Maria  Deo  Gratias.  This 
work  was  made  the  nth  of  April  1596, 
by  Owen  O'Sulivan  More,  Sily  Ny 
Donogh  Mac  Carthy  Rieogh.' 


COUNTIE  OF  KERRIE. 


'95 


This  Countie  is  in  a  manner  all  out  in  Rebellion,  the  Inglyshe 
almost  being  expelled ;  their  nomber  is  about  300  men. 

This  Countie  was  a  Countie  Palatyne  to  the  Earle  of  Des- 
mond, and  in  that  tyme  no  small  hinderance  to  the  Govern- 
ment of  Mounster,  by  reason  the  Liberties  and  Royalties  thereof 
falling  to  a  man  of  small  discretion  caused  him  to  be  insolent 
above  measure,  forbidding  the  L:  President  and  Councill  of  the 
province  to  have  any  dealings  within  this  Jurisdiction,  and  this 
was  the  verie  ground  and  caus  of  his  rebellion  and  utter  over- 
throw— which  evidentlie  teacheth  what  may  ensue  when 
Princes  do  bestow  places  of  Justice  (as  Justiceships  or  Sherrif- 
ships)  or  great  priviledges  upon  any  man  for  himself  and  his 
posteritie,  Seeing  no  man  can  assure  that  his  Posteritie  shall 
be  capable  thereof. 


There  also  are  graceful  figures  sup- 
posed to  be  likenesses  of  O'S.  and  his 
lady  in  '  mere  Irish  '  costume.  The 
lady  is  dressed  in  a  long  close-fitting 
gown,  which  covers  the  feet,  and  her 
headdress  is  something  '  stunning.' — 
Mr.  Dunoyer  in  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch., 
March  1859,  p.  291. 

O'S.  Mdr  lived  at  Dunkerron  Castle, 
acknowledged  the  suzerainty  of  Mac 
Carthy  Mdr,  was  his  hereditary  Mar- 
shal, and  ruled  over  960  square  miles  of 
territory.  The  lesser  septs,  who  owed 
fealty  to  O'S.  Mdr,  were  the  O'S.  of 
Beara,  Bantry,  Cappanacuss,  Ardea, 
Tomies,  and  the  Mac  Gillicuddy  of  the 
Reeks.  Their  castles  of  Carriganass, 
Dunboy,    Reendeshart,   Ardea,    Dun- 


kerron, Cappanacuss,  and  Dunloe,  are 
in  more  or  less  preservation,  and  attest 
the   power  of  a  race  whose  boast  is 
conveyed  in  these  lines — 
'  Nulla  manus  tarn  liberalis 
Et  generalis  atque  universalis 
Quam  Sullevanus. ' 

— Kilk.  J.  of  Arch.,  March  1859. 

Owen  of  Dunkerron  had  four 
brothers — Dermod,  m.  to  a  dau.  of 
Owen  McCarthy  Reagh  ;  Boghe,  m.  to 
a  dr  of  O'Donovan ;  Conor,  m.  to  a 
d.  of  the  Knight  of  Glynn  ;  Donal, 
m.  to  a  d.  of  O'Leary  (widow  of  Mac 
Gillicuddy).  He  had  two  sisters  m.  to 
O'Sullevan  Beare  and  the  Knight  of 
Kerry.  Owen's  son,  Donal,  mar.  ist  a 
d.  of  the  White  Knight,  and  2d  a  d.  of 
Lord  Kerry. 


196 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  LIMERICK. 

This  Countie  contayneth  all  the  Lands  from  the  mountaine 
nere  to  the  red  Sharda  joining  to  the  Countie  of  Corke,  to  the 
Sheynen  as  well  above  Limerick  as  beneath  in  manner  as  far  as 
Carrigfoyle,  and  from  Slewlogher,a  the  mountaine  that  devideth 
it  from  Kerry,  to  the  farthest  part  of  McBryan  O'Gonogher's 
Countrie  :  So  hath  it  Tipperarie  to  the  East,  Slewlogher  to  the 
West,  the  Countie  of  Corke  to  the  South,  and  the  Sheynen  to 
the  North. 

Limerickb  a  fayre  Walled  Cittie  upon  Sheynen. 


a  Redsherd  .  .  .  the  farthest  part  of 
Mac  Bryan  Ogannogh's  cuntry,  and 
comprehendeth  in  yt  Glanwillim, 
Canolokerry  alias  the  Knight  of  the 
Vallyes  cuntry,  and  Cosmoy.- — Dym- 
mok. 

Limericke  hath  in  it  the  Knight  of 
the  Valley,  William  Burcke,  Mac-Ibrine 
Ara,  part  of  the  White  Knight's  lands, 
Cosmay,  O'Braics,  and  upon  the  edge  of 
Kerry  the  greene  Knight,  alias  the 
Knight  of  Kerry.  It  hathe  Kilmallocke, 
lately  sacked  by  James  FitzMaurice,and 
Limericum  coasting  on  the  sea,  hard 
upon  the  river  Shannon,  whereby  are 
most  notably  severed  Mounster  and 
Connaght. — Campion,  pp.  3,  4. 

There  is  two  very  rich  countries  called 
Kennory  and  Conelogh,  both  within 
the  Co.  of  Lemericke,and  they  are  called 
the  Gardenes  of  the  lande,  for  the  va- 
riety and  great  plenty  of  all  graine  and 


fruites;  and  also  there  is  more  plenty 
of  venison,  fish,  and  foule  than  else- 
where in  Ireland,  altho  in  everie  place 
there  is  great  store.  This  land  belonged 
some  time  to  the  Knight  of  the  Valley, 
who  for  high  treason  was  executed  in 
Lemerick.' — Payne's  Description  of  Ire- 
land in  1589. 

Ireland  beares  good  corneof  all  sortes, 
in  particular  the  county  of  Limerick. — 
Dynelfs  Tour. 

b  See  a  map  of  it  in  the  Pacata  Hi- 
bcrnia.  'We  passed  by  Kilmalocke,  a 
good  corporate  town,  overasweetand  fer- 
tile cuntry,  unto  the  city  of  Limerick, 
which  is  indeed  a  town  of  castles,  com- 
passed with  the  fairest  wall  that  ever  I 
saw,  under  which  runs  the  goodly  river 
of  the  Shannon,  which  makes  it  a  haven 
for  ships  of  good  burden.  Though  it 
stands  above  three  score  miles  from  the 
sea,  yet  such  is  the  sloth  of  the  inhabi- 


COUNTIE  OF  LIMERICK. 


197 


Principall   Killmallock,5  a  Walled  inland  Towne. 
Toivnes.    Adare,d 


Rakeall,   | 


j  markett  Townes. 


tants,  that  all  these  fair  structures  have 
nothing  but  sluttishness  and  poverty 
within.' — Sir  J.  Davis,  see  p.  469  Cal. 
S.  P.,  1606. 

'  The  building  of  Limericke  is  sump- 
tuous and  substantial.' — Stanihurst,  p. 

25- 

The  Privy  Council  wrote  to  Carew  in 
1600 — 'We  perceive  by  the  Lord  De- 
puty's writing,  and  your  own  opinion, 
how  necessary  it  is  to  bridle  the  inso- 
lence of  the  town  of  Limerick.' — Car. 
Cal.,  pp.  384  and  403.  'It  was  kept  in 
check  by  the  Castle  in  1603;  its  people 
rescued,  in  1604,  a  priest  who  had 
been  arrested  by  warrant  of  the  Lord 
President  of  Munster;  200  and  more 
of  the  burgesses  were  indicted  in 
1606  for  not  coming  to  church.' — Car. 
Cal. 

The  Mayor  in  1598  was  James  Cron- 
well.  David  Cronwell  was  Bailiff  in 
1 56 1,  and  George  Cromwell  in  1 5  74,  and 
James  Cromwell  in  1586.  The  Bailiffs 
in  1598  were  Roche  and  Bourke.  In 
1597  Fitzjordan  Roche  was  Mayor,and 
men  of  that  name  were  Mayors  in  1499, 
and  often  after.  Stephen  Roche  was 
Mayor  in  1601,  and  Philip  R.  in  1602. 
Among  the  mayors  and  bailiffs  from 
1588  to  1608  were — Galway,  Roche, 
Creagh,  W.  Rice,  Woulf,  Bourke, 
Stackpol,  Stretch,  Fox,  Arthur,  White, 
Comyn    of    Parke,   Fanning,    Waters, 


Sexten,  Myeagh,  and  Hally.  The  Mem- 
bers for  the  city  were,  in  1585,  Arthur  and 
White  ;  in  1613,  White  and  Counsellor 
James  Galway.  In  1594,  'a  hundred 
tall  men  were  sent  to  ye  north, under  the 
leadinge  of  David  Woulfe,  capte.' — 
Lcnihan,  pp.  700  and  741. 

'I  saw  in  a  Grammer  schoole  in  Lime- 
rick one  hundred  and  threescore  schol- 
lers,  most  of  them  speaking  good  and 
perfit  English,  for  that  they  have  used 
to  conster  the  Latin  into  English.' — 
Payne's  Description,  p.  3. 

c  Formerly  the  seat  of  the  Earls  of 
Desmond.  The  Members  for  this 
borough  were,  in  1585,  T.  Verdon  and 
Hurley;  in  1613,  H.  Verdon  and  P. 
Kearney.  The  churches  contain  sculp- 
tured monuments  of  the  Geraldines, 
Verdons,  and  Halys  ;  and  tombstones 
of  the  White  Knights  and  the  Bur- 
gatts. 

The  houses,  built  of  hewn  stone, 
were  three  stories  high,  and  ornamented 
with  embattlements,  and  tasteful  stone 
mouldings. — Pari.  Gazetteer. 

dIn  1599  it  was  a  town  of  the  Earl 
of  Kildare's,  '  in  the  midst  of  bogs  and 
woods.'  Essex  had  to  rebuke  his  sol- 
diers for  '  going  so  coldly  on  '  against 
Desmond's  men  at  Adare. — Car.  Cal., 
304.  For  six  days  Desmond  skirmished 
with  Essex's  army,  and  '  cut  off  great 
numbers  of  his  men.' 


igS 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 


Arny.e  Carrigmlyhe. 

Crome/  Loughyn.k 

Askton,5  belonging  to  Capt.  Barcley. 
Carrigigonell,h  to  Bryan  Duff.h 


e  Perhaps  Owney,  now  Abington. 
There  are  here  monuments  to  Sir  E. 
Walshe,  who  d.  in  16 18;  to  O'Ryan, 
who  d.  in  1632  ;  and  to  Barry,  who  d. 
in  1633. 

'Belonged  to  Earl  of  Kildare.  It 
was  held  in  1600  by  Piers  Lacy,  and 
'  gave  great  annoyance  to  the  subject 
being  seated  at  the  entry  into  Conne- 
logh.'  It  was  taken  by  Carew  in  1600. 
Car.  Cal. 

e  Anciently  chief  house  of  the  Earls  of 
Desmond.  Its  castle  was  pressed  by 
the  Irish  in  1599,  but  was,  with  the  loss 
of  many  men,  revictualled  by  Essex. — 
Car.  Cal.,  pp.  304,  305. 

See  a  map  or  sketch  of  this  castle  in 
the  Pacata  Hibcrnia. 

h  Carrigogunnell,  now  one  of  the  lar- 
gest and  most  romantic  ruins  of  its  class. 
The  Harleian  MSS.  contain  a  pedigree 
of '  Brian  Duff  O'Brien,  of  Carrigconnell,' 
who  was  living  in  1615.  His  cousin, 
Morough  O'Brien,  'the  most  renowned 
and  noble  of  the  heirs  of  Carrig  OgCon- 
nell  and  Aherlagh,'  was  slain  by  the 
English  in  1577. — See  Annals,  1577. 

■  Perhaps  Cahirconlish,  which  be- 
longed to  the  Burkes  of  Brittas. 

k  It  may  be  Loughgur,  or  Glyn,  which 
is  in  Irish  Clochgleanna.  The  An- 
nals tell  how,  'In  July,  1600,  the  Presi- 


dent and  the  Earl  of  Thomond  set  out 
from  Limerick.  The  castle  at  which 
this  great  host  gathered  was  one  of  the 
castles  of  the  Knight  of  Glyn ;  it  is  situ- 
ated in  Glean-Corbraighe,  from  which 
it  received  the  name  of  Cloch-Gleanna, 
and  the  Knight  the  appellation  of 
' Ridire-an-Ghleannal  .  .  .  They  re- 
duced it  in  two  days,  and  slew  a  score 
or  two  of  the  Knight's  people,  together 
with  some  women  and  children.  Some 
of  the  President's  and  Earl's  men  were 
also  slain  by  the  warders.  In  1601  the 
Knight  of  Glin  (Edmond,  son  of  Thomas) 
was  with  O'Donnell  in  his  famous  march 
to  Kinsale. — Annals,  pp.  2175,  2275. 

See  a  map  of  the  castle  of  Glyn  in 
the  Pacata  Hibemia.  Of  Loughgur 
Carew  says,  '  I  marched  to  Bruff,  a 
castle  held  since  the  war  by  the  traitor, 
Piers  Lacy,  to  annoy  the  passage  be- 
tween Kilmallock  and  Lymerick.  Find- 
ing it  of  good  strength,  and  accommo- 
dated to  annoy  the  traitors  in  the  castle 
of  Logherr,  I  placed  a  ward  in  it.  Owen 
Groom,  a  stranger  of  the  north,  to  whose 
charge  Desmond  had  referred  the  castle 
of  Loughgerr,  at  the  approach  of  our 
army,  delivered  it  to  Ulick  Browne,  a 
freeholder  of  the  country.  The  castles 
of  Loughgerr  and  Bruff,  thus  possessed, 
give  better  liberty  to  the  cattle  of  Kil- 


COUNTIE  OF   LIMERICK. 


199 


Principall    Shenet.1 

Castles.      Castle  connellm  to  the  L:  Burke. 
Newcastle"  to  Jordan  Roche. 
Ballynitie." 

Robertstounep  to  Sr  Edward  Fitton. 
and    divers    others    belonging  to  the    undertakers, 
which  were    Howses  belonging  to  the  Earle  of 
Desmond  and  his  followers. 
Chief  Men.    The  Bishopq  of  Limerick. 

The  L:  Burkq  of  Castle  connell. 
Richard  Burker  of  Castletowne. 
Burk  of  Carrig/ 


mallock  (which  is  the  greatest  prey 
pertaining  to  any  town  in  Ireland)  to 
graze  abroad.' 

'As  the  Earls  of  Kildare  took  their 
war-cry  from  the  castle  of  Crom,  viz., 
Crem-abu,  so  the  Desmonds  took  theirs 
from  Shanid  Castle,  viz.,  Shanid-abu. 
The  hill  of  Shanid  is  still  crowned  with 
a  Cyclopean  fort,  and  with  the  ruins  of 
Shanid  Castle. — Pari.  Gazetteer. 

m  Hibernice,  Caislean-ui-Conaing. 

"  It  had  belonged  to  the  Desmonds. 
Jordan  FitzGerald  Roche  was  Mayor 
of  Limerick  in  1580  and  1588. 

0  It  belonged  to  the  O'Briens. 

p  Ballyrobert  Castle  belonged  to  the 
McClanchys.  From  1593  to  1600,  the 
castle  and  lands  of  Rathmore  were  held 
from  Maurice  Shighane  by  James  Oge 
Leo,  who  joined  the  rebels. — Car.  Cat., 
p.  449. 

The  castle  of  Ballycalhane  was  the 
chief  residence  of  the  Pursells  of  Kenry. 


Ballyalinan  Castle  belonged  to 
McSheehy,  Chief  Constable  of  the 
Geraldines,  who  d.  in  1601  ;  the  castle 
of  Lisnacullen  belonged  also  to  his 
sept. 

q  Vide  infra  '  Peers  and  Bishops.' 

rThe  following  Limerick  Burkes 
flourished  about  this  time  : — Richard 
Burke  FitzRichard  of  Cahirconlish 
Castle ;  John  B.  FitzRichard  of  Brittas 
Castle ;  his  mother  was  Onore  ni  Mul- 
rian;  his  wife'a  dau.  of  Sir  G.  Thornton ; 
his  brothers,  Theobald  and  William, 
lived  at  Cahirconlish.  Oliver  Burke  of 
Kilpeacon  Castle  d.  in  1592,  leaving  a 
son,  David  FitzOliver  B.  Richard  B. 
lived  in  Lismolane. — Limerick  Inqui- 
sitions in  Royal  Irish  Academy.  There 
was  also  a  Richard  Oge  B.of  Drumkeen, 
who  d.  in  1596,  and  is  ancestor  to  Lord 
Downes  and  Hussey  Burgh. 

The  Lambeth  Carew  MSS.,  No.  635, 
give  in  1570  Sir  William  and  Sir  Richard 


200 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Lacie  of  B.s 

Lacies  of  Ballingorie. 

Lacie5  of  the 


Burghe,  Lo.  of  Clanwilliam;  Burke  of 
Limerick;  Lord  Burgh  of  Castleconnell. 
John  Burke  of  Brittas  was  '  pietate, 
et  aliarum  virtutum  ornamento  non  ob- 
scuruSjSacerdotumpatronusclarissimus.' 
— CFSullevan.  '  He  was  of  good  strength, 
both  in  castles  and  followers.' — Car. 
Cal.,  1600,  p.  400. 

He  was  hanged  in  1607  for  'rebel- 
lion,' i.e.,  for  hearing  Mass  and  wishing 
to  keep  a  priest  in  his  house.  While 
in  Dublin  he  had  given  the  greatest 
edification  to  his  keepers  by  his  spirit 
of  prayer  and  mortification.  '  Vir  pien- 
tissimus.' — Fr.  Holiwood,  in  a  letter 
dated  Nov.  27,  1606. 

s  Bruffe  and  Bruree,  Ballinagarde  and 
Ballingarry.  The  De  Lacies  were  a  race 
of  warriors.  I  find  in  the  Inquisitions — 
Piers  L.  of  the  castles  of  Bruffe  and  Derry- 
clogh,  half-brother  of  Burke  of  Brittas, 
at  Adare  entered  into  rebellion  in 
1578,  and  was  slain  in  1601,  July  the 
23rd.  His  mother  was  Honore  Ni 
Mulrian  ;  Eddie  Lacie  of  Bruree 
claimed  to  be  his  heir.  Also  there 
were  Eddie  FitzWalter  L.  of  Ballina- 
garde, and  David  L.  of  Goreston. 

The  Gentry  and  Freeholders  of  Owney 
in  1570  were — Wm.  Leashe  of  the 
Browfe,  and  his  young  son,  William; 
David  Leashe,  Alleshaighe ;  James 
Fitzmaurice  Leashe  of  the  Clewhir. 

The  Gentry  and  Freeholders  of  Con- 


nellogh — Edye  Lacye  of  the  Browery, 
Piers  Purcell  of -the  Croagh,  John  Lacy 
of  Ballingarry,  Wm.  Lacy  of  Ballin- 
deryhly,  the  Walls  and  others. — Lam- 
beth MSS. 

At  this  time  (1597)  Davie  Lacie,  with 
hisbrotheren,  Pierce,  Ulick,  and  William, 
played  the  rebels,  being  once  pardoned. 
Davie  was  after  killed  in  service  ;  Pierce 
was  hanged  at  Limerick;  Ulick  and 
William  were  hanged  at  Kilkenny. — 
McCarthy  Mar,  p.  148. 

In  1 601  was  slain  in  battle  near 
Armagh,  Piers  Lacy  (Hibemice  Piers 
Oge  Dole's),  Lord  of  Bruff,  'equally 
illustrious,'  says  Mageoghegan,  '  for  his 
virtueas  forhisbirth,and  one  of  the  most 
zealous  defenders  of  Catholicity.'  The 
ruins  of  his  castle  are  still  visible.  Of 
his  family  were  the  famous  Lacys  of 
the  Russian  and  Austrian  armies. 

In  1598  Piers  L.,  'Vir  animi  p'.enus 
nee  eloquentiae  inanis,'  persuaded 
O'More  to  march  into  Munster;  he 
commanded  at  Adare,  and  slew  Plun- 
ket  for  not  attacking  Essex  in  a  defile. 
He  was  one  of  the  officers  who  rescued 
the  Earl  of  Desmond  from  Castle  Ishin. 
After  Desmond's  capture  he  went  to 
O'Neill.— O'Sulleiwi. 

Moryson  mentions  the  death  of  this 
'  Arch-rebell  from  Munster.'  He  was 
exempted  from  all  pardon  by  Elizabeth. 
—  Car.  Cal. 


COUNTIE  OF  LIMERICK. 


20I 


Roch'  of  Lickdowne. 
Hurley  of  Knocklig." 
McBryanv  of  Connaghe. 
McKennedie  McBryan.v 
McBryan  rath.  Q'Bryan.v 


'This  castle  belonged  about  this 
time  to  the  family  of  Archbishop 
O'Hurley. 

u  In  Irish,  Cnoduinga.  Knocklong 
Castle  is  now  a  ruin.  T.  O'Hurley  of 
Knocklong  was  M.P.  in  the  Parliament 
of  1585.  His  son  Randal  built  Ballina- 
carrig  Castle,  Cork,  and  mar.  the  dau. 
of  O'Collins,  a  Chief  in  Carbery.  His 
son  Maurice  d.  arc.  1632.  His  monu- 
ment in  Emly  bears  a  long  Latin  in- 
scription— '  Perillustris  Dominus  D. 
Mauritius  Hurlaeus,  Armiger,  Monu- 
ment. Hoc  sibi,  suisque  charissimis 
conjugibus  Graniae  Hoganae  et  Graciae 
Thorntonae,  .  .  .  posuit  elaborarique 
fecit.  A.N.D.L.  1632.'  Then  follow 
eight  distichs  in  his  praise — • 
'  Hie  jacet  hospitii  columen,  pietatis  asylum 
Ingenio  clarus,  clarus  et  eloquio,'  etc. 

In  1583  Archbishop  O'Hurley  was 
tortured  and  put  to  death  in  Dublin; 
in  1609  Edmund  and  Randal  Hurly, 
notwithstanding  their  minority  and  de- 
fect of  clerical  orders,  got  from  James 
I.  the  Chancellorship  and  Chantorship 
of  Emly  Cathedral. — Patent  Rolls. 

In  1606  Morice  Hurly  drew  Red- 
mond Purcell  into  a  castle  of  his,  and 
then  brought  the  English  on  him,  and 
they  executed  him  by  martial  law.  Red- 
mund   was    a    cousin-german    of   the 


Baron   of  Loughmoe. — Car.    Cal,   p. 
471. 

"  There  was  Donnell  McBrien  of 
Crosse,  whose  dau.  was  wife  of  Teig 
O'Hogan;  Tirlagh  McKennedie  MCB. 
of  Callough;  Donal  MCB.  of  Pallice 
Greyney,  whose  son  Moroughue  Oge 
was  bom  in  1600  ;  Moriertagh  MCB.  of 
Trian  Mona,  and  his  brothers  Tirlagh, 
Conogher  McConogher,  and  Kennedie 
MCB. — Inquisitions.  The  Annals  say 
that  Mac-Briain  Occuanach,  i.e.  Morier- 
tagh, son  of  Torlagh,  son  of  Moriertagh, 
went  to  the  Parliament  of  1585.  This 
M'Brian  Cuanagh  was  seated  in  the 
barony  of  Coonagh,  where  the  ruins  of 
his  splendid  mansion  are  still  to  be  seen 
at  Castletown.  In  1598  the  sons  of 
this  Moriertagh  joined  O'More. — An- 
nals, p.  2079. 

However,  Carew  informs  us  that  in 
1600  he  'took  a  castle  of  one  of  the 
Bryans,  called  Ballytarsny,  8  miles 
from  Limerick,  a  place  of  no  less 
strength  and  worth  than  Loghgerr,  and 
upon  good  pledge  delivered  it  to  the 
safe  keeping  of  McBryan  O'Gonough.' 
—  Car.  Cal.,  p.  400. 

w  Brian  McBrianO'BrianofGarraneny 
Manna  slain  in  1600.  Brian  O'B.  of 
Ballyclogh  Castle  joined  the  Desmonds ; 
but  in  1598,  being  at  peace  with  the 

2  c 


202 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 

The  Knight  of  the  Valley,"  Fitzgerrald. 


English,  he  was  slain  by  Redmund 
Purcell,  an  insurgent.  There  was  O'B. 
of  Ballygean;  O'B.  of  Afherlae;  O'B.  of 
Palliebeg. — Inquisitions.  The  chief 
of  the  O'B.  lived  at  the  castle  of  Car- 
rigunnell. — See  note  h.  The  Annals 
say  that  in  1580,  James  of  Desmond 
was  slain  by  the  Lord  of  Pobble-Brien 
and  Carrigogunnell,  i.e.,  by  Brian  Dubh, 
son  of  Mahon ;  and  that  in  1585  the 
Lord  of  Carrigogunnell  and  Fasach- 
Luimnighe,  i.e.,  Brian  Dubh,  son  of 
Donogh  O'Brien,  attended  Parliament. 

The  pedigree  of  Brian  Duff  O'B.  of 
Carrigogunnell,  who  lived  in  1615,  is 
among  the  Harlcian  MSS.  In  1584 
'A  grant  was  made  to  Brien  Duffe  O'B. 
Mac  Donagh  of  Carrigogynnell,  chief 
of  his  nacion  in  Pobelbrien  and  Lord 
of  Pobelbrien  (upon  his  surrender)  of 
all  and  singular  Manors,  Lordships, 
Castles,  etc.  ...  to  hold  to  the  heirs 
male  of  his  body,  remainder  to  his 
brothers,  Teig,  Mathew,  alias  Mahowne, 
Dermond,  Donalde,  and  Cnogher  O'B. 
...  to  find  3  sufficient  horsemen,  well 
furnished  with  horse  and  armour,  with 
three  hackneys  for  the  said  horsemen, 
with  their  apparel,  and  6  footmen,  alias 
shott  or  kerne,  either  galloglas.' — Rolls 
Office,  Dublin.  See  Lenihan,  pp.  76 
and  114. 

x  See  note  k.  O'Sullevan  calls  him 
Edmundus  Geraldinus,  Eques  Auratus 
Vallis,  and  says  he  joined  O'More  in 
1598,  and  joined  O'Sullevan  and  Tir- 


rell  after  the  defeat  of  Kinsale.  He 
was  lampooned  by  the  '  Red  Bard,' 
who  says  of  him  and  his  brothers  that 
'  after  being  killed,  they  survive ;  you 
will  find  their  track  to  Rathkeale ;  do 
not  seek  them  except  in  time  of  fairs.' 
He  means  that  they  are  marauders. 
The  Annals  call  him  Ridire-an-Gleatida 
(Emany  Mac  Thomais),  and  say  that 
he  was  with  O'Donnell  in  his  famous 
march  from  O'Maher's  countrey  to 
Owney,  'the  greatest  march  with  car- 
riage that  hath  been  heard  of;  an 
unreasonable  infinite  long  march,  in- 
credible, but  upon  my  reputation  it  is 
true,'  says  Carew. 

In  1600  he  was  exempted  by  Eliza- 
beth from  the  general  pardon,  by  the 
name  of  '  Edmond  FitzThomas  Fitz- 
Gerald,  commonly  called  The  Knight 
of  the  Valley.' — Car.  Cal.,  p.  502. 
His  son  and  heir,  Thomas,  emigrated 
to  Spain  after  the  battle  of  Kinsale. 
The  Knight,  'though  he  saw  the  canon 
ready  to  place  on  his  castle,  and  his 
son  in  my  hands  threatened  to  be  pre- 
sently executed,  would  not  yield.  In 
winning  his  castle  of  Glann,  in  1600, 
we  lost  1 1  soldiers,  whereof  one  ensign 
and  2 1  hurt.  Captain  Flower  had  four 
wounds,  and  the  lieutenants  of  the 
Earl  of  Thomond  and  Sir  H.  Power 
were  hurt.  Of  the  enemy  of  all  sorts, 
80  slain.  His  son  being  an  infant  (for 
humanity's  sake),  I  did  commiserate.' 
— Carew  in  Car.  Cal. 


COUNTIE  OF  LIMERICK. 


203 


Purcelly  of  the  crook. 
Several  Freeholders  of  the  Purcells,y 
Supples,2  Walshes,aa  Obirnes,bb 
Ryans,cc  Fyants,dd  Verdons,ee  Roches," 


y  Among  the  '  Freeholders  of  Conne- 
logh'  in  1570,  was  Piers  Purcell  of  the 
Croagh.  In  the  vicinity  of  Croagh  are 
the  remains  of  Amigan  Castle,  and  the 
castle  of  Cappa.  The  '  Red  Bard ' 
lampoons  the  Purcells  thus — '  The 
Kenry  men,  hard,  hissing  griffins. 
Hungry,  lean-bodied — a  begrudging 
horde.  All  their  infants  are  ill-favoured; 
before  baptism  they  speak,  ordering 
scanty  food  for  the  labourer.'  Their 
chief  residence  was  the  castle  of  Bally- 
calhane  in  the  barony  of  Kenry.  In 
1595  there  was  Purcell  of  Ballincarrigy. 
Among  the  open  friends  to  the  Earl  of 
Desmonde  were  'the  Purcells  of  the 
Crowghe,  the  Supples,  Chacies,  Lacyes, 
Hurleyes,  Brownes,  Rory  M'Shane,  all 
the  Shees.' — Car.  Cal.,  1601-1603. 

In  1581  David  Oge  P.,  son  of  David 
of  the  Lake,  son  of  Thomas,  son  of 
John,  son  of  Thomas,  son  of  Philip, 
son  of  the  Knight,  defeated  a  body  of 
Englishmen  near  his  castle  of  Ballycal- 
hane ;  to  avenge  which  the  English 
commander  of  Adare  slew  150  women 
and  children  in  and  around  that  castle. 
David  was  afterwards  taken  by 
McMahon,  and  '  the  heroic  soldier ' 
was  put  to  death  in  Limerick. — Annals. 
Supple  of  Kilmocua  joined  Des- 
mond.— Inquisitions.  Also  S.  of  Bal- 
lenetubbred. — Car.  Cal.,  1592. 


aa  The  chief  of  them  was  Sir  Edmond 
Walshe,  whose  tomb  is  in  Owney  ;  but 
he  will  be  given  under  Tipperary. 
Perhaps  this  name  is  meant  for  Nashes. 
There  were  John  FitzDavid  Nash  and 
his  brother  of  Ballycullen  killed  in  re- 
bellion in  1581  and  1583.  James  and 
Philip  N.  of  Ballycolla  Castle  lived 
circ.  1598  ;  also  Redmond  Oge  N.  of 
Sesherra,  and  James  Oge  N.  of  Ballone- 
kaherrogh. — Inquisitions. 

bb  Perhaps  O'Briens.  Anniver  O'Brien 
of  Skehannagh  was  slain  in  1601. — 
Inquisitions.  See  also  note  ".  Another 
O'Brien  lived  at  Gortboy. 

cc  O'Mulrian  of  Clonkine. — Inqui- 
sitions. One  of  the  gentlemen  of  the 
Co.  of  Limerick  in  1592  was  Connour 
O'Mulrian.  There  is  in  Abington  a 
monument  to  Wm',  chief  of  the  O'Ryans, 
who  d.  in  1632.  See  under  Tip- 
perary. 

dd  Called  'Plants'  in  the  list  of  1570. 
James  Ffante  of  Ffantestowne,  'inter- 
fecit  et  murderavit  Patricium  Ffante,' 
circ.  1598. 

ee  A  Verdune  was  Mayor  in  1553; 
there  is  a  monument  of  this  family  in 
Kilmallock. 

"  Jordan,  Dominick,  Stephen,  and 
Philip  R.  were  Mayors  in  1588,  1597, 
1601,  and  1602. 


204 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Whytes,gg  Sheerhes,hh  Arthures,H 


E  James  and  Robert  W.  were  Mayors 
in  1595  and  1569. 

The  '  Mayor's  Stone,'  near  the  cross 
of  Killeely,  outside  Thomond  Gate,  has 
the  inscription — 

'  This  Paving  was  wh 
Oly  ended  at  the 
Charges  of  the  Corpo 
Ration,  James  Whit 
E  Fitzjames  Esquir 
Being  Maior  Anni  Di 
MDCXXXVIII.' 

hh  McSheehy  of  Ballenerogie ;  MCS. 
of  the  castle  of  Ballynoe ;  MCS.  of 
BallymcKery,  and  Curraghmore. — In- 
quisitions. -The  MCS.  were  hereditary 
galloglasses  to  the  Desmonds,  and  had 
their  chief  residence  at  the  strong  castle 
of  Lisnacullia,  in  the  parish  of  Cloonagh. 
- — See  O  Donovan  in  Ulsi.  Jour,  of 
Arch.,  No.  22,  and  Annals,  p.  28. 

'MurtaghOge  MacS.  and  his  brothers 
Rorie  and  Edmund,  from  the  cradle 
inclined  to  mischief,  as  all  that  sept 
hath  been,  being  oft  apprehended  and 
imprisoned,  and  having  broken  prisons 
(Murtagh  at  Limerick,  Rory  at  Kil- 
kenny), after  many  favors  went  into 
oppen  accion.  Murtagh  was  marked 
by  nature ;  he  had  a  strong  arm,  a 
desperate  villanie,  and  a  skilful  tar- 
geteer.  He  was  taken  in  a  wood 
killing  of  porkes,  and  making  provision 
to  entertain  the  rebels  of  Leinster. 
Being  brought  to  Cork  and  arraigned, 
evidence  was  given  against  him  that  he 
had    prayed,    spoiled    and    murdered 


about  fourscore  English  families.  Sen- 
tence was  given  that  he  should  have 
his  arms  and  his  thies  broken  with  a 
sledge,  and  hang  in  chains.  So  he 
was  executed  without  the  north  gate  of 
Cork  an°  1597.  Rory  was  killed  by  an 
Irish  kerne ;  and  Edmund  was  killed 
by  an  Englishman  at  the  spoil  of  Kil- 
kolman.'—  McCarthy  Mor,  p.  148. 

"  Dr.  Arthurs'  father,  William,  d.  in 
1622,  aged  60.  His  person  was  hand- 
some, symmetrical  and  upright  his 
form  ;  a  long  beard  graced  his  cheeks ; 
courteous,  polite,  mild  of  eyes,  of 
voice,  of  aspect,  munificent,  clement 
and  kind,  the  prayers  of  all  bless  him. 
Far  from  him  was  wrath,  treachery, 
malice,  and  the  crime  of  odious  avarice; 
a  worshipper  of  faith  and  of  God, 
estimable  for  guileless  simplicity.  His 
generous  house  was  open  in  hospitality 
to  foreign  exiles.  He  married  in  1587 
Anastatia  Rice,  who  was  mother  of  a 
numerous  offspring,  long  abstained 
from  meat  and  wine,  and  d.  in  1640, 
aged  70. — Dr.  Arthur,  quoted  by 
Lenihan,  p.  368. 

James  Stackpole  had  a  son  Bar- 
tholomew, who  mar.  in  1636  a  dau.  of 
the  famous  Dr.  Arthur  of  Limerick, 
He  gave  his fiancee  25  wedding  presents, 
amongst  which  were  a  small  goulde 
cross,  a  goulde  ring  weighing  22  carats, 
2  small  gould  rings,  5  carats  each  .  .  . 
i  payer  of  Spanish  leather  shoes. — 
Arthur  MSS. 


COUNTIE  OF  LIMERICK. 


205 


Sir  George  Bowcher,  Sir  Edwd.  Fitton, 

Sir  W'"m-  Courtney,  with  divers  others  of  the 

Burkes/  Lacies,5  Geraldines,jj  Shees,hh 

Foxes,kk  Jordans,  Fannings.11      Of  the  undertakers, 


s  Thomas  McShane  FitzGerald,  alias 
Thomas  Cam,  of  Clenglish,  mar.  a  dau. 
of  M'Carthy  of  Muskerry;  he  is  an- 
cestor of  FitzGerald  of  Castle  Ishin, 
Co.  Cork.  He  had  the  castle  of 
Gortnitybured. — Inquisitions. 

tt  Fox  of  Ballyheward.- — Inquisitions. 
Edmund  Fox  was  Mayor  in  1605. 
u  Often  Mayors  arid  Bailiffs. 
In  St.  John's  Church  there  was,  anno 
1763,  a  monument  with  figures  of 
the  Twelve  Apostles  sculptured  in  stone, 
and  the  inscription — 

'  Thomas  Power,  quondam  Civis  Lime- 
ricensis,  et  ejus  uxor  Joanna  Rice  hoc 
monumentum  haeredibus  suis  con- 
struxerunt,  in  quo  ambo  sepeliuntur. 
Ora  pro  eis  pius  lector. 

Quisquis  eris  qui  transis, 

Sta,  perlege  plora, 

Sum  quod  eris,  fueramque  quod  es. 

Pro  me,  precor,  ora. 

Hoc  finito,  A.  D.  1622.' 
In  Broadstreet  there  is  an  inscription 
on  a  chimneypiece — 

Petrus  Creagh  Filius  Andrae  et 
Elionora  Rice  uxor  ejus 
Curarunt  extrui  has  Aedes 
A  suis  Haeredibus  in  timore 
Amore   et   favore  Numinis   diu  Possi- 
dendas  viventibus 
I.H.S. 

1640.  — Lenihan. 

Geoffry  Galway,  Mayor  of  Limerick, 

a  man  who  had  spent  many  years  in 


England  in  studying  of  the  common 
law,  and  returning  to  Ireland  about 
three  years  since,  did  so  pervert  that 
citie  by  counsell  and  example,  that  he 
withdrew  the  mayor,  aldermen,  and 
generally  the  whole  citie  from  coming 
to  the  church,  which  before  they  some- 
times frequented.  About  a  year  ago 
he  prevailed  on  the  maior  to  disarm 
the  soldiers,  whereby  a  gapp  was  open 
to  him  to  induce  a  massacre  of  his 
Majestie's  forces.  Galway  was  fined 
^400  for  this  by  Carew. — See  Pac.  Hib. 

Twelve  of  the  name  of  Harold  were 
Mayors,  and  8  either  Bailiffs  or 
Sheriffs.  Daniel  Harold,  Esq.,  of 
Limerick  is  of  this  family. 

Edmond  Sexten  owned  the  Convents 
of  St.  Mary  and  St.  Francis,  given  to 
his  grandfather,  Edmond  Sexten,  by 
Henry  VIII.  In  1636  he  was  buried 
in  the  ancestral  tomb  in  St.  Mary's, 
with  'all  the  solemnitie  that  the  countie 
made    and    could    afforde.' — Lenihan, 

P-  657- 

Also  O'Madden  of  Knocktorine, 
slain  in  1598.  McKeough  of  the 
castle  of  Cloneleiffe;  McCanny  of  the 
castle  of  Drombanny ;  O'Riardon  of  the 
castle  of  Tholowie,  and  O'Riardon  of 
Rostemple ;  Dondon  of  the  castle  of 
Ballystine;  Teig  McClancy  of  Roberts- 
town,  killed  at  Glynn  in  1600;  Strich 


206 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Sir  John  Outrich.mm  Capt.  Barcley. 

Capt.  Collam.  Mr.  Billinglesloy.mm 

George  Thornton,  provost  Marshall  of  Mounster. 
The  most  part  of  the  Irish  are  joined  together  in  this  Re- 
bellion, especiallie  such  who  either  themselves  or  whose  Parents 
lost  their  Lands  by  the  Earle  of  Desmond's  rebellion.11" 


of  the  castle  of  Rathward,  and  Stritch 
of  Gort  Veaghan ;  England  of  the  castle 
of  Englandstovvn,  whose  father  was 
hanged  for  rebellion,  his  mother  was 
Unie  Ni  Donell  Clancie ;  Mahowne 
McDa  of  Kilmede  and  Atheveghan ; 
Browne  of  Camus,  in  rebellion,  ancestor 
of  Marshal  Ulick  Browne,  the  opponent 
of  Frederick  the  Great;  Liston  of 
Skehanagh;  Bugget  of  Buggedstown; 
Donal  Barry  of  Ballygeybeg  d.  in  161 2; 
his  son  Dowle  Barry's  monument  is  in 
Owney;  O'Hynowrane  of  Muskry; 
O'HynowranejO'RiodialligheofBallen- 
nodiallighe;  Wale  of  Listordan;  M. 
FitzEdmund  Hubert  of  Rathkielly,  and 
Hubert  of  Ballycooghane ;  Hubert  of 
Camoye;  McThomas  of  Pallice;  Fitz- 
William  of  Dromeard ;  Donogh  McWil- 
liam  Oge  of  Glenstille,  who  murderavit 
Rochford,  a  Limerick  merchant ; 
McGrath  of  Galbally;  R.  Oge  Cusshine 
of  Liscorroge;  E.  McAllister  Gavin  of 
Ballynerine,  who  rebelled  in  1584; 
Leo  of  Thollovine;  John  Crom  Fitz- 
Nicholas  Sarsfield  of  Amogane;  Woulfe 
of  Williamstowne. — Inquisitions.  Raw- 
ley  of  Ballingowley,  O'Heyne  of 
Cahirelly,  M'Mahown  of  Cragan,  Wall 
of  Cloghtreade,  Fitzjohn  of  Balline- 
mong,    FitzEdmund   of    Gilliterstown, 


McTighe  of  Tuogh. — Lenihan,  p.  138. 

Gentlemen  of  Connyloughe  in  1592: 
— Suppell  of  Ballenetubbred,  Thomas 
McEae,  Doole  McMulmurry,  David 
Lacie,  R.  Wale,  J.  Lacie  FitzDavid, 
P.  Lalor,  Morys  Cooswill,  McHenry, 
Cartrill  McGerrott,  J.  FitzThomas 
MThillipp,  Gerrott  Liston,  J.  Nashe, 
Wm.  Oge  England,  David  Barrie, 
Moriertagh  McMorghe,  J.  Russell. 
Among  the  gentlemen  of  Limerick 
county  there  were  besides — E.  Miaghe, 
Oliver  Bourke,  Conor  O'Mulryan,  J. 
Verdon  (Sheriff),  J.  Golde,  Stephen 
Sexten,  McBrene  X  O'Gonaghes  (his 
mark),  T.  Yong,  Jordan  Roche,  J. 
Monsloy,T.  FitzEdmond,  Wm.  McRick- 
ard,  T.  Brown,  T.  Fitz William,  E. 
Whytte,  Moroghe  X  M'Brene  (his 
mark),  Redmond  FitzWilliam. — Car. 
Cal.,  p.  67. 

mm  Sir  H.  Outred  of  Maghawnagh  d. 
in  1599. 

In  1589  Billingely,  Oughtread, 
Barkley,  Courtney,  and  Trencher  got 
12,000  acres  each  in  Conclogh  at  4d. 
an  acre. — McCarthy  Mor,  p.  17. 

nn  '  In  Limbricke  Piers  Lacy,  with 
the  McShees,  Clanwilliam  (Burkes),  and 
other  septs,  300  f.  and  15  horse  in  1599.' 
—  Car.  Cal., -p.  300. 


COUNTIE  OF  TIPPERARIE.  207 


THE  COUNTIE  OF  TIPPERARIE. 

This  Countie  is  devided  into  Two  Counties,  the  one  called 
the  crosse  of  Tipperarie,  the  other  the  Countie  of  the  Libertie 
of  Tipperarie,  which  is  a  Countie  Palatyne  belonging  to  the 
Earle  of  Ormond.  In  the  Countie  of  the  Crosse  the  Quenea 
appointeth  yearlie  a  Sherriff  as  her  onlie  officer.  The  Countie 
Palatyne  is  ruled  by  a  Constable  [Seneschal],  a  Justice,  and  a 
Sherriffe,  all  three  appointed  by  the  Earle  of  Ormond. 

These  two  Counties  of  the  Crosse  and  of  the  Libertie  of 
Tipperarie  are  so  mingled  together,  as  no  plat  or  card  can  be 
made  to  shew  any  apparent  division,  but  by  observation  and 
Custome  whereby  the  Inhabitants  do  know  the  one  from  the 
other.  The  whole  countie  ioyntlie  comprehendeth  all  the  Land 
from  Callan,  in  the  Countie  of  Kilkenny,  tob  the  [  ]  of 

]  Westward,   and  from  Emelie,  which  was  the 

a'The   Queene   maketh    the   Shriff  A  document  of  the  16th  century  in 

her  head   officer.       The    Palatyne   is  Kilkenny  Castle  states  that,  '  Kilkenny 

gouerned    by    sceneschall    Justice,    a  and  Tipperary  counties   being  joined 

shriffe,  and  divers  other  meaner  officers,  together  under  one  capteyn,  have  rated 

which  two  counties  lye  onelie  by  obser-  themselves  to  bear   for   their  defense 

vation  and  custome.' — Dymmok.  each  "three  score  beds   (every  bed  a 


b  (  ' 


'  To    Mac    O'Brien    O'Gannogh's  horseman  and  2  kerne),  8  score  sparys 

cuntry    in    the    county    of    Lymrike,  of  galoglas  (i.e.,  6  score  sherts  of  mayle, 

O'Mulrean's  cuntry,   Mac  Brian   Ara,  the  rest  is  allowed  to  the  capteynes  and 

O'Downie's  cuntry,  upper  and  nether  their  men  to  carry  their  armor)."     The 

Ormond,  Constinagh,  Cosehi,  Muskry  total  monteth  to  60  horse,  120  kerne, 

whirke,  a  great  part  of  Harlow,  and  by  and  120  galoglas  for  Kilkenny,  and  the 

ancient    division     O'Carroll's    cuntry,  lykenombrein  Typperary.' — Kilk.Jour. 

Elye,  though  he  disclaim  from  yt.' —  of  Arch.,  year  1855,  p.  234. 

Dymmok.  '  Tipperarie,  which  is  now  the  only 


208 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Seat  of  a  Bishop,  to  Conshilaghe,  the  West  part  whereof  belong- 
eth  to  this  Countie,  the  rest  to  the  Countie  of  Kilkenny,  and  so 
contayneth  the  Countries  of  Omulryans,  Odwyers,  upper  and 
nether  Ormond,  a  part  of  Conshelaghe,  Cosheshany,  Muskry 
Wherke  a  great  part  of  Arklo,  and  all  onaught.  It  extendeth 
from  Tobragney  (a  Well)  in  the  South,  to  the  Field  of  Breynd 
in  the  North  40  Miles,  and  from  east  to  West  some  32  or  33 
Miles.     The  Quene  hath  reserved  only  the  Tryall  of  Treasons 


Countie  Palatine,  is  made  a  receptacle 
to  rob  the  Countries  about  it,  by  meanes 
of  whose  privileges  none  will  follow 
their  stealthes,  so  as  it  being  situate  in 
the  very  lap  of  all  the  land  is  now  made 
a  border,  which  how  inconvenient  it  is 
let  every  man  judge.' — Spenser,  p.  46. 

The  Baronies  in  the  Co.  of  Tippcrary, 

and    what    Septs    inhabit    them    in 

1600. 

Lower  Ormond — The  three  O'Kene- 
dies.  Upper  Ormond — M'Teg  of  the 
Kenedies,  whose  chief  house  is  Badine- 
doghie;  in  it  is  also  the  castle  and  abbey 
of  Nenaghe,  the  Earl  of  Ormonde's 
lands ;  the  O'Mares,  the  Hegans,  the 
Hogans. 

Owney  CMulrian  (part  of  this  ba- 
rony is  in  the  Co.  Limerick) — O'Mul- 
rians.  In  this  barony  is  the  abbey  of 
Owney,  Sir  Edmond  Welshe's  house, 
which  was  built  by  the  White  Earl  of 
Ormond. 

Kilnemanaghe — O'Duire,  descended 
from  the  O'Briens. 

Ikerim — O'Magher  and  the  Earl  of 
Ormond's  castle  of  Roskrey. 


Eliogortie — -Parcel,  Baron  of  Lough- 
may  ;  Cantwell  of  Mocanke.  It  hath 
in  it  the  abbey  of  the  Crosse,  Thurles 
Castle,  and  Templemore,  the  Earl  of 
Ormond's  lands. 

Slewardie — Sir  James  Oge  Butler, 
Fanning,  Cantwell,  Leffar,  Mariner. 

DowArra — McBrienArra,descended 
from  O'Brien  of  Tomond. 

Eliagheand  Killinaghlohart — McWal- 
ter  Burke  in  Eliagh,  Donogh  Mac 
Shaneglasse  O'Mulrian. 

East  Clanwilliam — The  Burkes  of 
Muskrie,  the  Burkes  of  Onaught,  the 
Burkes  of  Coshnaie,  part  of  the  O'Briens 
of  Arloghe. 

Comshey  (part  in  Co.  Kilkenny) — 
The  Tobins. 

Middlethird — Butler,  Baron  of  Dun. 
boyne,  the  Hackets,  Stapletons,  and 
Mocleere. 

Cantred  of  Clonmel — -Butler,  Baron 
of  Cahir,  the  Prendergarsts,  the  Powers, 
and  McCraghes. —  Car.  Col.,  p.  513. 

Freeholders  of  Crosse  Tipperary  in  1 600. 

Cantred    of    Middlethird — Everard 

of  Kilmocley,  Butler  of  Morestowne- 


COUNTIE  OF  TIPPERARIK. 


20Q' 


to  herself  in  the  Countie  of  the  Libertie,  all  other  crymes0  and 
actions  which  are  tried  and  decided  before  the  Earle  of  Ormond's 
officers. 

Chief  Toivnes 
in  this  Countie. 


Cashell,d  well  walled. 


Kirke,  Butler  of  Garriarde,  Mockler  of 
Ballynattine,  Stapleton  of  Thurles-beg, 
Hackett  of  Marshalstown,  Hacket  of 
Ballycomuske,  Malladg  Carran  of  Bur- 
densgrange,  Meagher  of  the  same, 
T.  FitzRichard  Stapleton  of  Leynaghs- 
town,  E.  Stapleton  of  Garranpheccard. 

Slevardaghe — Piers  Butler  Fitz James 
of  Ballinonetie,  J.  Laffane  of  Greys- 
towne. 

Eliogertie — Purcell  of  Kilcaske,  Pur- 
cell  of  Burres-Lieghe,  Stapleton  of 
Kilcloine,  Hugh  O'Meagher  of  Kil- 
oskehane,  Conogher  O'Meagher,  D. 
O'Meagher,  and  P.  O'Meagher  of  the 
same. 

Cantrcd  of  Clonmel — T.    Butler    of 
Ballehymicknie,  Lord  Baron  of  Cahir, 
Butler   of  Cloghecullie,    P.    Butler   of 
Knockenamine,  E.  Butler  Fitzjohn  of 
Mullaghenonie,  T.   Butler  of  Tample- 
Ehennie,  Prindergaste  of  Ballyvorish, 
Prindergast  of  Grandg,  P.  of  the  same, 
P.  of  the  Pregnanes,  P.  of  Kilvynnine, 
P.  of  Carrigetearhie,  P.  of  Rath  O'Kel- 
lie,    Keating  of  Ardfinnane,   E.  White 
of  the  same,  McDonoghe  of  the  same, 
Eustace  Englishe  of  Cloghemenecode, 
Eustace  English  of  Rahine,  Mansfield 
of  Loghtogherie,    Keating   of   Mores- 
town  e,  Donoghowe  of  Blackcastle,   E. 
Mocler   of    Ballycurrine,    Sherlock   of 


Clearichanstowne,  Geoffrey  Mockler  of 
the  same,  T.  Butler  FitzEdmond  of 
Rathnelowre,  T.  Butler  Fitzjohn  of 
Rathenuskie. 

Clanwilliam — Wm.  Ryane  of  Sel- 
chod,  J.  Hiffernane  of  Lattine,  M. 
Hiffernane  of  the  same,  O'Hiffernane 
of  the  same,  Pilline  of  Duncomyne, 
Burke  of  Kilbeckane,  (O'Dwyer)  of 
Kilnemannaghe,  J.  O'Dowyre  of  Ballin- 
garrane. —  Car.  Cal.,  p.  480. 

c  Vide  the  last  note  on  this  county. 

d  '  It  is  said  100  castles  are  visible 
from  the  Rock  of  Cashel. ' — Kilk.  Jour, 
of  Arch.,  an.  185 1,  p.  465. 

'  We  passed  from  Limerick  to  Cashell 
over  the  most  rich  and  delightful  valley 
in  Ireland  for  the  space  of  20  miles. 
In   Cashel  we  found  only  one  inhabi- 
tant that  came  to  church,  for  even  the 
Archbishop's  own  sons,    and   sons-in- 
law,  dwelling  there  are  obstinate  recu- 
sants.    We  indicted  more  than  100  in 
this   poor  town.     The   cathedral  is  a 
fair  ancient  structure,  on  a  high  hill.' — 
Sir  J.  Davys  in  1606 — Car.  Cal.,  475. 
The  Will  of  Cantwell  of  Moycarkey, 
Esq.,  dated  1618 — 'I  recommend  my 
soul  to  Almighty  God,  to  be  placed  in 
ye  bosome  of  Abraham ;  and  do  will 
my  body,  after  my  decease,  to  be  buried 
in  St.   Patrick's  Church  at  Cashel,   in 

2  D 


210 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Clonmell,e      > 
Fedart,f        ) 


well  walled. 


mine  ancestor's  tombe  there.' — Jour,  of 
Kilk.  Arch.  Soc,  May  1859,  p.  320. 

In  the  old  cathedral  of  Cashel  there 
is  a  small  shield,  upon  which  are  the 
arms  of  Boyton — '  three  spur  rowels  ' 
— with  the  name  of  Boyton  in  old 
English  letters  inscribed  upon  it.  Also 
the  tomb  of  O'Kearney,  the  lord  of 
many  manors  in  the  neighbourhood, 
who  d.  in  1460  ;  his  direct  descendant, 
David  O'K.,  was  Archbishop  of  Cashel 
in  1602.  The  O'K.  lived  at  the  castles 
of  Killusty,  and  Barretstown,  at  Cap- 
paghmore,  and  Knockinglass. 

e  '  A  well  built  and  well  kept  town. 
Being  in  the  liberty,  is  more  haunted 
with  Jesuits  and  priests  than  any  other 
town  or  city  in  this  province,  which  is 
the  cause  we  found  the  burgesses  more 
obstinate  here  than  elsewhere.  The 
Lord  President  did  gently  offer  to  the 
principal  inhabitants  not  to  proceed 
against  them  if  they  would  yield  to 
conference  for  a  time,  and  become 
bound  in  the  meantime  not  to  receive 
any  Jesuit  or  priest  into  their  houses  ; 
they  peremptorily  refused.' — Davys. 
See  Car.  CaL,  year  1606,  p.  475. 

f  Tombs  in  the  Abbey  of  Fethard : 
'Hie  jacent  Thaddeus  O'Meagher  de 
Ballidin,  et  Anastatia  Purtia  ejus  uxor, 
qui  me  fieri  fecerunt,  20  Maii  anno  Salu- 
tis  1600.'  The  present  representative  of 
that  family  is  Mr.  O'Meagher  of  Fethard. 

In  the  market  house,  which  had  in 
former  days  been  a  monastery,  there  is 


the  inscription — '  Dama  Everardus, 
alias  Roche,  relicta  Joannis  Everardi 
Junioris  haec  insignia  erexit  .  .  .  qua? 
obiit  xii  Aug.  1646.'  She  was  the  d. 
of  Roche  of  Ballinard  Castle,  near 
Fethard.  The  noble  mansion  of  the 
Everards  is  converted  into  a  barrack. 
A  few  years  ago  the  only  representative 
of  this  once  illustrious  house  was  a 
little  servant  girl  living  in  Mullinahone. 
The  Roches  of  Ballynard  Castle  have 
also  disappeared. 

'  Hie  jacet  R.  Heiies  qui  obiit  xxix 
Dec.  1615 ;  cujus  perdillectus  fater, 
Thomas  Heiies,  etiam  uxor  ejus  Anas- 
tasia  Archer  me  fieri  fecerunt' 

'Orate  pro  animabus  Edmondi  Tobin 
de  la  Briscelagh,  gen.  Margarae  Tobin 
uxoris  ejusdem,  Thomae  Tobin,  filii  et 
haeredis  ipsius,  et  Joanae  Tobin  alias 
Marrenel,  uxoris  ipsius  Thomae,  qui  hie 
jacent,  et  me  fieri  fecerunt 

Anno  Doni  1634.' 

Briscelagh  was  the  residence  of  the 
Tobins  at  Kylenagranagh  ;  its  founda- 
tion is  still  visible  and  is  called  Sean- 
cloch,  '  the  old  stone.' 

'  Hie  jacet  Bemardus  Kearney  Burgi 
de  Fiderdiae,  Filius  Mauritii  Kearney 
Burgi  ibidem,  qui  Bernardus  obiit  an. 
1682  aet.  38,  Cujus  uxor  Katherina 
Kearney  alias  Dwyer  me  fieri  fecit  an. 
Dni  1687.'— Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

Bryan  O'Kearney,  S.J.,  was  probably 
of  the  Kearney  family  that  preserved 
St.  Patrick's  Crozier.     From  their  pos- 


COUNTIE  OF  Tiri'ERARIE. 


21  I 


Men  of 

Name} 


Carrig,s  well  walled. 

Emelie,  \ 

Tipperarie,    \  Wast. 

Holicrosse,   ) 
The  Earle  of  Ormond1   Butler. 
The  L.  of  Caer1  Butler. 

The  L.  of  Dunboyne*     Butler. 
The  Arch  Bishop'  of  Cashell. 


session  of  this  valuable  relic  they  were 
called  O'Kearney  Baeu/a,  or  Kearney 
Crux.  This  relic  was  in  the  possession 
of  Bryan  O'Kearney  of  Fethard,  who  d. 
in  1765.  He  was  the  last  of  the  male 
line  of  the  O'Kearney  Crux  family, 
and  he  sold  the  remnant  of  their 
estates  to  the  ancestor  of  the  present 
Lord  Lismore. 
'  Hie  jacent  Ricardus  Wale  de  Rath 

kynny, 
Generosus,  et  Catherina  Wale  alias 
Carran  filia.  Mathiae  Carran  de 
Mobarnane  ejus  uxor  .  .  . 
Quorum  animabus  orate  ad  Dominum. 
Datum  ultimo  Februarii,  Salutis  1635.' 
- — Kiik.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

s  In  the  Church  of  Carrick  is  a  flat 
stone  with  the  inscription — '  Here 
lieth  entombed  the  bodie  of  Thomas 
Butler,  Esq.,  sonne  to  the  R.  Hon.  th' 
Erie  of  Ormond  and  Ossory,  who  died 
being  Sheriffe  of  the  Co.  of  Typerary 
the  12  Jan.  1605.' 

On  an  altar-tomb  at  Ballyneale,  near 
Carrig-on-Suir,  is  the  inscription — 'Hie 
jacet  Philippus  Quemerford,  quondam 
collactaneus    Comitis   Ormoniae    cum 


uxore  sua  Margarita  Shea  A.  Dni  1630. 
Qui  obiit  10  Juni.'  It  bears  the 
arms  of  Comerfcrd  and  Shea. — Kilk. 
Jour,  of  Arch.,  year  1862,  p.  10. 

At  Ballintemple,  near  Carrick-on- 
Suir,  is  a  monument  on  which  a  hand- 
some floriated  cross  with  the  legend 
in  raised  letters — '  Here  lyeth  J  hone 
Boutlr  FitzGeroit  of  Bolendesert,  and 
his  wyf  Johana  FitzRicardi  Ano  1587 
]  to  be  made.'  Up  to  1654 
the  Butlers  owned  Bolendesert,  and  the 
(now  ruined)  castle  of  Ballinclohy. 

The  other  tombstone  has  the  legend 
■ — '  Hie  jacet  Dons  Carolus  Everardus 
filius  Gabrielis  Everardi  filii  Joannis 
Everardi  de  Fethard,  Equitis  aurati  et 
quondam  Justitiarius  Regis  Banco,  hie 
quoque  jacet  uxor  ei'  Catherina  Wale 
filia  de  Gulielmo  Wale  de  Cuilnemuc. 
Orate  pro  animabus  suis  [  ]  Mali 

1643.' 

The  Everards  owned  large  posses- 
sions near  Fethard,  and  also  Burntcourt, 
near  Clogheen ;  they  may  now  be  con- 
sidered extinct. 

b  See  at  note  b,  two  very  full  lists. 

1  See  infra  '  Peers  and  Bishops.' 


212 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  Barronet  of  Loghmiek  Purcell,  and  many 
Gentlemen  depending  upon  these  Noblemen, 
as  the 

Butlers.1  Cantwells."1 

Purcells.k  Kennadies." 


k  In  1598  'the  Lord  of  Clonmel- 
Third  and  Cahir,  and  the  Baron  of 
Luachmhagh  (Loughmoe),  with  many 
others  of  the  young  Butlers,  joined  in  this 
war  of  the  Irish.' — Annals.  The  mag- 
nificent ruins  of  Loghmoe  Castle  and 
mansion  are  still  visible.  A  Baron 
Purcell  of  Loughmoe  and  his  son  were 
killed  at  Aughrim. — Rawdon  Papers, 
p.  351.  Thomas  P.,  Baron  of  Lough- 
moe, had  a  dau.  mar.  to  Butler  of  Bally- 
nodagh  and  Moyaliffe,  and  a  dau.  mar. 
to  John,  brother  of  the  2d  Lord  Dun- 
boyne.  Theobald,  son  of  Richard, 
'  Baron  of  Loughmoe,'  mar.  a  dau.  of 
the  2d  Lord  Dunboyne. — -Lodge,  un- 
der Lords  Carrick,  Mountgarret,  and 
Caer. 

There  was  a  Piers  Pursell  of  Kil- 
nesier.  — Inquisitions. 

1  Butlers  of  Ardmayle  Castle,  of 
Ballykyrin. — Inquisitions.  B.  of  Bally- 
boe,  B.  of  Rouskagh,  B.  of  Shanbally- 
duffe,  B.  of  Cabragh.  Sir  James  B.  of 
Lismallen  and  Clonamelchon,  mar.  a 
dau.  of  the  Earl  of  Ormond,  and  had  a 
son  who,  in  1628,  became  Viscount 
Ikerrin ;  B.  of  Kilmoyler  and  Bella- 
carren. — Lodge. 

Sir  Walter  B.  of  Kilcash,  nephew  of 
10th  E.  of  Ormond,  with  some  gentle- 
men of  Tipperary,  defeated  Redmond 


Bourk,  and  forced  him  to  fly  to  Spain  ; 
in  this  action  Sir  Walter  was  wounded. 
He  mar.  a  dau.  of  L.  Mountgarret ;  he 
became  11th  Earl,  and  d.  at  Carrrick 
in  1632.  On  account  of  his  devotion 
to  the  Blessed  Virgin,  he  was  called 
'  Earl  Walter  of  the  Rosaries.'  He  had 
three  sons  and  nine  daughters.  His 
sons-in-law  were  Power  of  Monagha- 
largy  in  Tipperary,  son  of  Lord  Power; 
Butler,  Viscount  Ikerrine;  Butler  of 
Grellagh,  son  of  Lord  Dunboyne  ;  Bag- 
nal  of  Dunleckney;  Sir  E.  Blanchville 
of  Blanchvillestown,  and  Richard  6"1 
Earl  of  Clanrickard. — Lodge. 

Piers  B.  of  Ballynenodagh  or  Moya- 
liffe, son  of  W.  Butler,  and  a  dau.  of 
McBrien  Ogonagh,  d.  in  1627,  and  was 
buried  in  the  Abbey  of  Holy  Cross. 
His  wife  was  a  dau.  of  the  Baron  of 
Loghmoe ;  his  sisters  were  m.  to 
O'Dwyer  of  Dundroney  in  Tipperary, 
to  Sherlock  of  Mothe  in  Waterford,  to 
Esmond  Baron  of  Limbrick  in  Wex- 
ford.— Lodge. 

The  Lord  of  Slewardagh,  i.e.,  James 
Butler,  d.  in  1600. — Annals,  p.  2185. 

m  C.  of  Athassell. — Inquisitions. 

"  O'Kennedy  of  Ballyloghyappull. 

Teig  M'Rorie  McManeny  O'K.  of 
Ballyrushane,  O'K.  of  Annagh  Castle, 
Belafinvoy    Castle,   Kyriagh   Kearowe, 


COUNTIE  OF  TIPPERARIE, 


21 


Odwyrs.0 

Burkes.p 

Englyshes.q 


Loughshearnes. 
Whytes.r 


Brackagh,  Lackin,  Curraghmoririn, 
Ballygibbon,  Caragharnine,  Ballycoly- 
tan,  Ballyhinikyne,  Delysinclonty, 
Knockmelura. — Inquisitions.  All  these 
were  '  in  accion.' 

'MTeig  of  Ormond,  i.e.,  Conor  of 
the  Harbour,  son  of  Teig,  grandson  of 
Mahon  Don  O'Kennedy,  d.  in  1583, 
a  ready  tranquil,  domestic  man  without 
reproach.  Philip,  son  of  Dermot  O'K. 
of  Ropalach,  was  then  styled  McTeig. 
The  son  of  McCoghlan,  an  intellectual 
youth,  on  his  first  assumption  of  chivalry, 
was  slain  by  the  son  of  Kennedy 
Finn  in  1583.'  In  1588  (Bryan) 
O'Kennedy  Finn  d.,  upon  which 
Owny,  son  of  Donogh  Oge,  and  Gilla- 
duffe,  son  of  Dermod,  were  at  strife 
about  the  Lordship;  at  length  the  terri- 
tory was  divided  equally  between  them, 
and  the  name  was  conferred  on  Owny. 
In  1599  Sean,  son  of  Giolla  Dubh,  son 
of  James  O'Kennedy  from  Ballingarry- 
Knocshiena  in  Ormond,  was  slain  by 
Hugh,  son  of  Morogh  O'Kennedy  from 
Ballyquirk.  O'Kennedy  Finn  (Owny) 
of  Ballyhough  in  Lower  Ormond  d.  in 
1599,  and  Gilla  Dubh  O'K.  was  then 
styled  the  O'Kennedy  Finn.' — Annals. 

0  O'Dwyers  of  Torrehie,  Kilnecree, 
Cwillo-Cotta. — Inquisitions. 

O'Duibhidhir  of  Coill-na-manach  d. 
in  1594,  and  his  son  Diarmaid  took  his 
place.     O'D.  joined  O'More  in   1598. 


— Annals.  'In  1600  Redmond  Burke 
with  600  men  entered  Odwire's  countrie 
to  burn  and  prey  the  same.  Odwire, 
having  assembled  as  many  men  as  that 
short  warning  would  permit,  fell  upon 
one  of  his  Divisions  which  consisted  of 
200  foot;  of  them  he  slew  120  and 
many  hurt.  In  revenge  whereof  Burke 
entered  a  second  time  into  the  said 
countrie  where  he  slew  Man,  Woman 
and  Child,  burnt  all  the  houses  (castles 
excepted),  and  drove  away  all  the 
Cattle  of  the  countrie.' — Pacata  Bib., 

P-  59- 

p  Burkes  of  Banshagh  Castle;  R.  Liagh 
B.  and  J.  Moel  B.  brothers,  of  Shanganagh 
and  Pollaghbeg;  B.  of  Drominagh,  B. 
of  Drangan,  J.  Oge  B.  of  Fehertagh, 
David  B.  FitzWilliam  of  Ballinesillagh, 
B.  of  Bellankoaly,  Thos.  B.  FitzWilliam 
of  Swyfine,  B.  of  Ballydare,  B.  of  Las- 
sinagh. — Inquisitions.  In  1583  'John 
Carragh  B.,  heir  to  Cois-Suir  (in  Clan- 
william),  who  had  been  in  rebellion, 
went  and  seized  all  the  cattle  of  the 
Adare  ;  the  warders  pursued  him,  and 
while  with  his  small  body  of  horse  he 
was  charging  them,  he  was  shot  through 
the  helmet.  His  people  carried  off  the 
prey,  but  John  was  taken  and  hanged 
in  Limerick.' — Annals. 

q  E.  of  Cloghemenecode,  E.  of  Ra- 
hime  in  1600. —  Car.  Cal.,  p.  480. 

r  Of  Clonmel— See  Co.  of  Waterford. 


214 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Ryans.s 


Bryans,' 


and  divers  Religious  Houses. 


*  D.  Mac  Shaneglasse  O'Mulrian 
of  Graigeneskie,  Loughlin  MTeig 
MThomas  Finn  O'M.  of  Bollibane, 
O'M.  of  Craig. — Inquisitions.  In  1598 
the  O'Ryans  joined  O'More. — Annals. 

In  the  Abbey  of  Owney  there  was  a 
monument  of  the   Head   of  this  race 
who   died  in    1632.     The    inscription 
was — 
Noblissimus  Dns  Gulielmus  Rian  Pa- 

trije  suae 
De  Ownii,  necnon  antiquae  Rianorum 

familiae  Caput 
Et  Princeps,  sibi,  uxori  et  liberis  suis 

hanc  sepulchri 
Molem  erigi  curavit' 

— See  the  rest  in  Dynely's  Tour. 

1  Mac-I-Brien  Ara  d.  in  1601  ;  his 
sons  were  Donogh,  Mortogh,  Bishop 
of  Killaloe,  Torlogh  Carrach,  Teig  na 
buile,  Morogh  na  Tuath. — Memoirs  of 
the  <J Brians,  p.  546.  The  castles  of 
Ballina,  Casteltown  and  Cnoc-an-Ein- 
Finn  belonged  to  them. — Annals,  p. 
1835,  note. 

'  In  1592  More  O'Carroll,  wife  of 
Mac-I-Brien  Ara,  died — she  had  spent 
a  good  life,  without  reproach. 

'  Mac-I-Brien  Ara,  i.e.,  Torlogh,  d. 
in  1601.  There  was  no  other  lord  of 
a  territory  so  old  as  he  on  the  night  he 
died.  He  was  an  active,  warlike  man, 
who  had  led  his  followers  in  safety 
from  every  territory  into  which  he  had 
gone,  and  seldom  had  any  troops  who 
had  entered  his  territory  escaped  from 


him  scathless  :  a  man  who  had  de- 
fended the  rugged  and  hilly  district, 
which  he  possessed,  till  his  death.  He 
was  interred  in  his  own  fortified  resi- 
dence of  Baile-an-Chaislen.' — Annals. 

There  were  also  McBrien  Roe  of 
Tornonyne,  O'Brien  of  Lahesheragh, 
O'B.  of  Killmostully,  whose  wife  was 
Slany  Ni  Vrick. — Inquisitions. 

In  the  Abbey  of  Owneythemonument 
to  Sir  E.  Walsh  (spoken  of  under  note 
b)  bears  the  figures  of  Saints  Peter  and 
Bernard,  of  the  Blessed  Virgin,  and  St. 
Mary  Magdalene.  He  d.  in  161 7,  as 
appears  by  the  Hexasticon  Chrono- 
logicon  in  raised  letters  on  it — 
'  Jam   sexcenti  mille  annis  septemque 

decemque 
Virgo   ex   quo   enixa   est   immaculata 

Deum  .  .  . 
Edmundus  Torquatus  eques,  vir  max- 

imus  armis, 
Major  at  hospitio,  nee  pietate  minor.' 
— Dynely. 

A  tomb  at  Dangan  has — 'Hicjacet 
Thadeus  Geankagh  O'Meagher,  gene- 
rosus,  qui  obiit  19  Dec.  1627  cujus 
animae  propitietur  Deus.'  O'Meagher 
lived  at  Drumsaileach,  near  Roscrea. 

In  1602  the  most  distinguished 
branch  of  the  Mac  Egans  lived  in  the 
castle  of  Coillte  Ruadha  or  Red-Wood, 
in  the  parish  of  Lorrha,  in  the  neigh- 
bourhood of  which  the  head  of  that 
branch  still  retains  a  small  patrimonial 
estate.' — Hy-Many,  p.  168. 


COUNTIE  OF  TirrERARIE. 


215 


All  the  Erles  of  Ormond. 


Chief  Castles         Carrig, 
are —  Thurles, 

Templemore, 

Kilshelshane, 

Roscree, 

Kilfekle, 

Caeru  beloncrino-  to  the  L.  thereof. 


I  find  in  the  Annals  the  following 
entries  about  the  O'Meaghers  and 
McEgansandO'Hogansof  thisperiod: — 
'The  son  of  O'Meachair  (John  of  the 
Glen)  d.  in  1592.  In  1601  the  Con- 
naught  Burks  were  surprised  in 
O'Meachair's  country  by  the  Butlers, 
and  many  of  them  were  slain  "through- 
out their  tents  and  booths."  In  1601 
Cairpre  Oge  McEgan,  ensign  to  the  son 
of  the  Earl  of  Ormond,  was  slain  in 
the  attack  on  Rincorran.  In  1602 
Donogh  McEgan  of  Killte-roe  was 
killed  while  attacking  O'Sullevan  on 
his  passage  across  the  Shannon.  Ogan 
O'Hogan  of  Ard-Croine  d.  in  1598  ;  he 
had  four  brothers — Conor  of  Ardcrony, 
John  Prior  of  Lorha,  Gillapatrick, 
Erenach  of  Lorha,  and  William.  His 
pedigree  is  given  in  MTirbis.  Ogan's 
brother,  "  John,  Prior  of  Lorha,  was 
slain  by  a  party  of  the  O'Kennedies  in 
J599- " — Annals. 

Also  the  O'Hogans  of  Knockme- 
lora,  Ballyhynkyne,  and  Gortneskehy  ; 
O'Maghers  of  Killballyhin,  Ballyfoline, 
Gurtyn  McPhilip,  Towmenagh,  Dan- 
gensallagh ;  O'Carroll  of  Cowleowen- 
leane  Castle,  in  Eli  O'Carroll ;  O'Clery 


of  Fydden ;  Cosmeagh  M'Egan  of 
Agheway ;  M.  McGerald  Prendergast 
of  Ballybeg,  P.  of  Leackymack,  P.  of 
Newcastle;  the  McGillfoyles  of  Bally- 
styanch  and  Gortnebeist ;  Keating  of 
Gormanstown  Castle,  killed  fighting 
against  Essex ;  the  Conways,  Youngs, 
and  Sails  of  Cashel ;  the  McCraighs  of 
Downans  and  Ballynecourty ;  O'Foger- 
tie  of  Monroe  Lististie ;  Roche  of 
Cranagh  ;  the  Stapletons  of  Rathlegty 
and  Drom  ;  O'Carran  of  Burretstown 
Castle  ;  Moncell  of  Moglasse  ;  Moclear 
of  Moclearstown  ;  O'Hiffernan  of  Kill- 
morie  ;  Tobin  of  Poulecapple. — Inqui- 
sitions. Tobin  of  Cumshinagh  mar.  to 
dau.  of  Lord  Mountgarret ;  Prendergast 
of  Newcastle. — Lodge. 

Gerald  Grace,  called  Marcach  or  the 
Horseman,  of  Carney,  Co.  Tipperary, 
and  of  Ballylinch  and  Legan  Castles, 
Co.  Kilkenny,  d.  in  1618,  and  was  in- 
terred in  Jerpoint  Abbey ;  his  mother 
was  a  dau.  of  Lord  de  Decies  ;  his  son, 
Oliver,  called  Skevach  or  the  Hand- 
some, d.  in  1625.- — Memoirs  of  Family 
of  Grace. 

■  See  a  map  of  it  in  Pacata  Hibernia. 
'It  is  a  place  of  greater  strength  than 


2l6 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Loghmo  to  the  Barronet  thereof. 

So  this  Countie  hath  Waterford  on  the  South,  Limerick 
directlie  on  the  West,  Cork  South  West,  Thomond  or  Shenan 
Northwest,  and  Lough  Degert  upon  the  Sheynan,  being  in 
length  30  Miles  to  the  North. 

Of  this  Countiev  the  most  are  in  Rebellion,  especiallie  the 
younger  Brethern,  and  all  the  Dependers,  althoughe  the  eldest 
keep  in  shew  of  obedience. 


any  other  in  this  kingdom,  and  of  great 
consequence.'  It  was  besieged  and 
taken  by  Essex  in  1599. — See  descrip- 
tion of  the  place  and  siege  in  Car.  Cat., 
p.  302. 

v  Carew  writes  to  Mountjoy  in  1601 
— '  I  thought  good  to  discover  to  you 
the  distempered  state  of  Tipperary  and 
Kilkenny.  Keddagh  O'Magher  hath 
gathered  300  rogues  together,  and  doth 
many  outrages.  In  Osserie  the  Baron 
of  Upper  Osserie's  nephews  are  entered 
into  rebellion.  In  Kilkenny  the  3rd  son 
of  Viscount  Mountgarret  and  some  of  the 
Graces  ransacked  that  country,  and  do 
join  with  Keddaghe  O'Magher;  and 
lastly  200  men  under  the  leading  of  T. 
Butler,  a  bastard  son  to  Sir  Edmond 
Butler,  are  drawing  into  Tipperary  to 
assist  Kidagh  O'Magher.  As  this  up- 
start rebel  is  in  my  Lord  of  Ormond's 
liberty  (who  by  his  good  will  did  never 
like  to  have  her  Majesty's  forcesto  inter- 
meddle within  his  liberty),  I  have 
written  to  his  Lordship  to  undertake 
the  service,  or  to  leave  it  to  me.     The 


poison  of  rebellion  rests  nowhere  in 
Munster  but  in  my  Lord  of  Ormond's 
country.  As  long  as  he  liveth  I  look 
for  no  good  establishment  in  those 
borders  ...  his  council  about  him 
will  evermore  abuse  him,  and  under 
his  authority  will  give  impediments 
to  all  good  proceedings.' — Car.  CaL, 
102. 

Forces  in  Tipperary  in  1599 — The 
Baron  of  Cahir  and  James  Butler  his 
brother,  with  their  followers  and  depen- 
dencies, 300  f.  and  1 2  horse  ;  the  White 
Knight,  400  f.  and  30  h. ;  Raph  Purcell, 
Baron  of  Loughmey,  with  his  followers, 
200  f.  6  h.;  Cahir  McShane  Glasse 
O'Mulrian,  and  the  rest  of  the  O'Mul- 
rians,  30of.  60  h. ;  Keadaghe  O'Magher, 
60  f.  30  h.  ;  Brian  Oge  O'Kennedie, 
Hugh  O'Kennedie,  with  the  rest  of  the 
O'Kennedies  in  Ormond,  500  f.  30  h. ; 
Redmund  Burke,  pretending  himself 
Baron  of  Letrym,  and  his  bonoghs, 
300  f.  20  h. ;  William  Burke  Fitzjohn, 
with  the  rest  of  the  Burkes  of  Clan- 
william,  200  f.  4  h. — Car.  CaL,  p.  299. 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


21  7 


THE    NOBLEMEN1    OF    IRELAND. 

Gerrot  Fitzgerrald  Earle  of  Kildare,  Baron  of  Offallie,  his 
eldest  Sone  is  L.  Baron  of  Offallie.  The  first  creation  of  this 
Earldome  was  an0  13 15 — 9  Edwd.  2d.b  The  first  Erie  of 
Ireland  by  creation.  Sir  Thomas  Butlerc  knight,  L.  Butler 
Viscount  of  Carrick  and  Gaurane  Earle  of  Ormond  and  Osserie, 


a  '  By  conference  with  certaine  gen- 
tlemen attendants  on  Sir  H.  Sidney, 
Lord  Deputie  (who  excelleth  in  that 
knowledge),  I  tooke  notice  of  the  most 
noble  English  families  in  Ireland,  which 
here  ensue  with  their  surnames  as  they 
stand  at  this  present.' — Campion,  1571. 
b  One  record,  that  I  have  seene, 
nameth  a  Geraldine  the  first  Earle  of 
Kildare  in  anno  1289;  but  another 
saith  there  dyed  a  Geraldine  the  fourth 
Earl  of  Kildare  in  anno  13 16.  The 
family  is  touched  on  in  the  Sonnet  of 
Surrey,  made  upon  Kildare's  sister, 
now  Lady  Clinton — 

'  From  Tuscane  came  my  Ladye's  worthy  race, 
Fair  Florence  was  sometimes  her  ancient 
seate  ; 
The  western  Isle,  whose  pleasant  shore  doth 
face 
Wilde  Cambre's  cliffes,  did  give  her  lively 
heate.' — Campion. 

William  13"'  Earl  of  Kildare  was 
drowned  in  1599. — See  supra,  p.  46. 
His  two  base  brothers,  called  '  Bastard 
Geraldines,' were  'in  accion'  in  1599. 
— Car.  Cal. 


c  Called  by  the  Annals  (an.  1560), 
'  Thomas,  son  of  James,  son  of  Piers 
Roe,  son  of  James,  son  of  Edmund.' 
O'Sullevan  styles  him,  'Thomas  Butler, 
cognomine  Niger.'  He  was  iolh  Earl 
of  Ormond  and  3d  Earl  of  Ossery  ;  was 
son  of  the  9*  Earl  and  of  Joan,  dau.  of 
the  11th  Earl  of  Desmond;  born  in 
1532,  and  d.  in  1614  ;  was  brought  up 
as  '  playmate  and  bedfellow'  of  Edward 
VI.,  distinguished  him  at  the  battle  of 
Musselburgh,  against  Wyat  as  '  Lieu- 
tenant of  the  horsemen,'  against  the  Scots 
of  Ulster,  the  O'Briens  of  Thomond,  the 
O'Mores;  took  the  Earle  of  Desmond  pri- 
soner and  killed  46  of  his  captains,  800 
'  notorious  rebels,'  and  4000  of  his  private 
soldiers,  and  was  Lord  High  Marshal 
of  England,  and  Captain  and  Lieutenant 
General  of  the  Army  in  Ireland.  He 
was  'a  man  of  great  parts,  admirable 
judgment,  vast  experience  and  pro- 
digious memory,  very  comely,  and  of 
black  complexion ;  he  was  called  by 
the  Irish,  Dubh  or  the  Black  Earl,  and 
by  Elizabeth,  her  black  husband.     The 

2  E 


2l8 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


L.  of  the  Libertie  and  regalitie  of  Tipperarie,  L.  High  Treasurer 
of  Ireland,  and  one  of  the  Right  Honorable  Order  of  the  Garter, 
his  Eldest  Sone  is  Viscount   Thurles.     The  Second  Earle  by 


flower  of  his  country,  he  kept  the 
greatest  house,  and  used  the  most  hos- 
pitality of  any  in  the  kingdom,  and  for 
his  valour,  wisdom,  liberality,  and  virtue 
was  greatly  honoured  not  only  in  England 
and  France,  but  .  .  .  and  was  com- 
monly taken  by  them  to  be  a  pattern 
of  true  honour.' — Archdall  in  note  to 
'  Lord  Mountgarret,'  v.  4. 
To  him  Spenser  wrote — 

'  But  where  thyself  hast  thy  mansion, 

There  indeed  dwell  faire  Graces  many  one, 

And  gentler  nimphs,  delights  of  learned  wits. 
And  in  thy  person  without  Paragon 

All  goodly  bounty  and  tine  honour  sits.' 

This  '  true  honour '  shines  in  his  letter 
to  Burghley,  who  proposed  to  him  a 
way  of  capturing  Desmond  by  treachery. 
'  My  Lord,  I  wol  never  use  trcchery  to 
any,  for  it  wol  both  toche  her  highness' 
honor  to  moch,  and  myne  owne  credit, 
and  who  so  ever  gave  the  Queene  ad- 
vise this  to  write  is  fitter  to  execute 
such  base  sarvice  than  I  am.  Saving 
my  du/ye  to  her  Majestic,  I  ivo/d  L  weare 
to  have  revenge  by  my  sivord  0/  any  man 
that  thus  pcrsuadctli  the  Queene  to  wryte 
to  me.' — See  Life  of  Mac  Carthy  Mor, 

V-  329- 

When  Elizabeth  asked  him  to  use  his 
intimacy  with  Hugh  O'Neill  to  entrap 
him,  he  wrote  to  Burghley — 'I  have 
been  employed  by  her  Matic  in  manie 
services  ...  all  which  (I  thank  God) 
I  have   performed  without   using  un- 


honest  or  filthy  practices;  if  my  thanks 
shall  be  to  be  put  to  execute  trechery, 
my  fortune  is  bad,  and  the  service  much 
better  for  such  as  devised  the  same, 
than  for  me,  that  never  had,  thank 
God,  a  thought  of  any  such  matter.  I 
protest  before  God,  etc' — See  '  The 
Taking  of  the  Earl  of  Ormond'  in 
Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

Davis  writes  in  1606 — '  My  Lord  of 
Ormond  hath  lain  at  Carrick  ever 
since  his  last  weakness,  because  the 
feast  of  St.  George  fell  out  on  the  Easter 
holidays.  I  was  not  suffered  in  any  wise 
to  depart  until  I  had  seen  him  do  honor 
to  that  day.  He  was  not  able  to  sit 
up,  but  had  his  robes  laid  upon  his 
bed,  as  the  manner  is.' — Car.  Cal.,  477. 

Sir  Bernard  Burke  says,  this  Black 
Earl  '  was  the  first  of  his  family  who 
conformed  to  the  Church  of  England;' 
however,  he  was  a  Catholic  for  the  last 
nine  years  of  his  life.  About  the  29th 
of  Nov.  1604,  two  Jesuits  of  his  county 
palatine  were  with  him  (cum  languente 
Comite) ;  they  were  Fathers  Walter 
Wale  and  Bryan  O'Keamey,  of  'the 
devilish  clergy  of  Tipperary';  in  April 
1605  Fr.  Wale  alone  was  with  him,  as 
all  obstacles  had  been  broken  down — 
'  non  sine  toiius  Hiberniae  gaudio.'  In 
October  it  was  announced  that  Fr. 
Wale  had  gained  the  sick  Earl  to  God 
some  months  previously;  and  in  June 
1606,  he  could  not  be  used  for  general 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


219 


creation  but  first  by  his  place  of  Tresurership  his  first  Creation 
was  1327  ane  Ist  Edwd.  3d. 

The  Earle  of  Desmond3  created  the  same  year,  his  name 


missionary  work— 'quod  principi  cui- 
dam  viro  sit  necessarius.'  Fr.  Wale's 
companion  and  uncle,  O' Kearney,  wrote 
thirty  discourses  (Triginta  Discursus) 
on  the  death  of  this  Earl,  which  were 
preserved  in  MS.  in  the  Archives  of 
the  Gesu,  Rome. — Let/as  (penes  me) 
of  Fathers  Hollywood,  O'Kearney,  and 
Wise,  written  in  1605  and  1606  to 
their  Father-General  Acquaviva.  O'Sul- 
levan's  Historia,  Dr.  Lynch's  Alithino- 
logia,  and  Hibcrnia 'Dominicans,  mention 
his  conforming  to  the  Catholic  Church. 

d  The  following  were  the  children 
of  Gerald  the  15th  Earl  of  Desmond, 
who  was  slain  in  1583,  and  whose 
lands  of  800,000  acres  were  divided 
among  English  adventurers — 1°  James 
the  16th  Earl  (the  Queen's  Earl)  who 
died  in  1601  ;  2"  Thomas ;  30  Margaret 
m.  to  Dermod  O'Connor  of  Connaught ; 
4°  Joane  m.  to  Dermod  O'Sullevan 
Bere  ;  50  Catherine  m.  ist  to  Viscount 
Fermoy,  2dly  to  Sir  Donel  O'Brien; 
6°  Ellen  m.  ist  to  Sir  Donogh  O'Connor 
Sligo,  2d  to  Sir  R.  Cressy,  3rd  to  Ed- 
mond  Lord  Dunboyne,  she  died  in 
1 660.  Their  mother,  the  Countess, 
was  a  daughter  of  Lord  Dunboyne;  she 
re-married  with  Sir  Donogh  O'Connor 
Sligo,  and  died  in  1636. 

Their  uncle,  Sir  Thomas  Roe,  had 
been  recognized  as  15th  Earl  by  the 
Government,  but  was  ousted  by  his  step- 


brother, Gerald.  Sir  Thomas  had  1° 
a  son  James,  who  was  elected  and  by 
right  16th  Earl  in  159S;  he  was  the 
Suga)n  Earl.  He  mar.  first  a  d.  of 
Lord  Cahir,  secondly  a  d.  of  Lord 
Power ;  20  a  son  of  Gerald,  a  Count  in 
Spain;  30  John,  living  in  Spain  in  16 15 
as  Conde  de  Desmond  ;  his  wife  was  a 
daughter  of  Comerford  of  Danganmore  ; 
his  son  Gerald  was  Conde  de  Desmond, 
and  was  killed  in  Germany  in  1632. 
4°  Ada  m.  to  Donogh,  second  son 
of  the  7th  Mac  Carthy  Reagh ;  50 
Margaret  m.  to  the  8th  M'Carthy 
Reagh. 

James  Paderagh,  illegitimate  son  of 
the  15th  Earl  of  Desmond,  mar.  a  d.  of 
Wall  of  Culnamuc,  and  had  four  sons, 
Maurice,  James,  John,  and  Maurice 
Fitzjohn,  who  were  all  living  in  the 
year  1598.— '  Unpublished  Geraldine 
Documents,'  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

James  FitzThomas  was  rightful  Earl 
of  Desmond  in  1598.  In  1598  he 
wrote — '  To  my  very  good  Lo.  and 
Cosen  the  Erie  of  Ormond — I  have 
be'n  in  England  from  my  Father  claim- 
ing his  inheritance  of  the  House  of 
Desmond,  which  is  manifestlie  known 
to  be  his  righte ;  Her  Matye  promised  to 
do  me  justice  upon  the  decease  of  my 
uncle,  who  was  then  in  accion.  Ever 
since  my  uncle's  decease  I  could  gett 
no  hearinge  concerning  my  inheritance 


220 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Fitzgerrald,  his  hous  extinct,  his  Sone   is  Viscount   Desmond. 
Richard  Burk  Erie  of  Clonrickard  and  Baron  of  Dunkellyn, 


of  the  Earldome  of  Desmond,  but  have 
bestowed  the  same  upon  divers  under- 
takers to  disinherite  me  for  ever  .  .  . 
seeing  no  other  remedie,  I  will  follow 
by  all  means  I  may  to  maintain  my 
right,  trusting  in  the  Almightie  to  fur- 
ther the  same.' — Life  of  M'  Carthy  M6r, 
p.  177. 

He  writes  to  the  King  of  Spain  in 
1599 — 'I  have  drawen  the  sword  for 
the  recovery,  first  of  Christ's  Catholike 
religion,  and  next  for  the  maintenance 
of  my  owne  right,  wrongfully  detained 
from  me  and  my  father  who  was  lawfull 
heir  to  the  Earldome  of  Desmond  ;  for 
he  was  the  eldest  sonne  to  James  my 
grandfather,  who  was  Earle  of  Desmond; 
and  for  that  Uncle  Gerald  (being  the 
younger  brother)  usurped  the  name  of 
the  Earle  of  Desmond  in  my  father's 
true  title,'  and  being  '  annoyed  by  the 
wicked  English-prosecuted  wars,  was 
slaine  and  his  country  planted  with 
Englishmen.' — Pac.  Uil>.,  p.  253. 

This  James  McThomas  and  his  father 
sided  with  the  English  against  '  uncle 
Gerald,'  were  the  rightful  owners  ac- 
cording to  English  (though  not  by 
Brehon)  law  of  800,000  acres  of  land 
which  the  English  undertakers  had 
seized  on,  and  consequently  they  must 
have  been  'usurping  and  titulary  Earls,' 
and  they  were  'extinct,'  to  use  the  word 
of  our  MS. 

Carew  writes  to  Elizabeth,  June  3, 


1601 — '  I  thank  God  for  it,  I  now  have 
at  length,  by  means  of  the  White 
Knight,  gotten  into  my  hands  the  bodie 
of  James  FitzThomas,that  Archtraytour 
and  usurping  Earle,  whom  for  a  present 
I  will  send  to  your  Majestie  with  the 
best  conveniencie  and  safetie  I  may  find.' 
He  was  (says  Carew,  or  his  Secretary) 
within  one  year  before  his  apprehen- 
sion the  most  mightie  and  potent 
Geraldine  that  had  been  of  any  of  the 
Earles  of  Desmond  his  predecessors  .  .  . 
he  had  8000  men  well  armed  at  one 
time.- — Pac.  Hib.,  p.  250. 

The  son  of  '  uncle  Gerald '  wrote  to 
Cecil  from  the  Tower — '  I  am  yong,  yet 
olde  in  miserye;  I  have  never,  since 
my  infancy,  breathed  out  of  prison.' 
He  was  physicked  frightfully  at  the 
expense  of  the  Government — perhaps 
to  carry  off  the  Geraldine  poison  out 
of  his  system. — See  the  bill  for  'boluses, 
juleps,  glisters,'  etc.,  in  Life  of  McCar- 
thy MSr,  p.  4S8.  He  was  sent  from 
the  Tower  to  Ireland  as  Earl,  set  up 
against  James  McThomas.  However, 
some  about  Elizabeth  said — '  Yea,  but 
he  maie  proove  a  rebell  hearafter ; ' 
and  Cecil  says  to  Carew — 'Whensoever 
you  fynd  any  cause  toe  doubt  him, 
never  feare  to  laie  holde  of  him  ...  he 
will  never  much  lyke  an  Irish  lyfe,  for 
he  is  tender  and  sicklye,  but  time  will 
shewe.' 

He  reached  Kilmallock  on  a  Satur- 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


22  1 


his  Eldest  Sone  is  Baron  of  Dunkellyn*  created  by  K.  H.  8th. 
Donogh  0'Bryanf  Erie  of  Thomond  and  Baron  of  Ibrackan, 
his   Eldest   Sone    is    Baron   of  Ibrackan,   created    1550  an0   i° 
Edw.  6th. 


day;  the  people  crowded  round  him. 
'  Although  he  had  a  guard  of  soldiers 
which  made  a  lane  for  him,  the  con- 
fluence was  so  great  as  he  could  hardly 
make  his  passage.  The  next  day  he 
went  to  church,  and  all  the  way  his 
countrey  people  used  loud  and  rude 
dehortations  to  keep  him  from  church 
...  he  was  railed  at  and  spet  upon, 
and  thenceforward  would  walke  as 
little  regarded  as  any  private  gentle- 
man .  .  .  his  Religion  bred  this  coynesse 
in  them  all,  if  he  had  been  a  Romish 
Catholike,  the  hearts  and  knees  of  all 
degrees  in  the  Province  would  have 
bowed  to  him.' — Pac.  Hib.,  p.  163. 

e  Ulick,  3rd  Earl  of  Clanrickard,  m.  a 
dau.  of  Burke  of  Tullyra.  He  d.  in 
1 60 1.  His  son  John  was  made  Vis- 
count Burke  of  Clanmories;  his  son 
Edmund  of  Kilcornan  was  ancestor  of 
the  Redingtons  of  Kilcornan,  and  of 
the  Burkes  of  Greenfield,  Co.  Galway. 

This  Ulick,  son  of  Richard,  son  of 
Ulick  of  the  Heads,  was  sedate  and 
just  judging,  of  a  mild,  august  and 
chief-becoming  countenance,  affable  in 
conversation,  gentle  towards  the  people 
of  his  territory,  fierce  to  his  neighbours, 
and  impartial  in  all  his  decisions ;  he 
had  never  been  known  to  act  a  feeble 
part  on  the  field  of  danger  from  the  day 


he  had  first  taken  up  arms. — Annals, 
1601.  His  son  and  heir,  '  Richard  of 
Kinsale,'  so  called  for  having  contri- 
buted more  than  any  one  to  the 
English  victory  at  Kinsale,  m.  the 
widow  of  Essex ;  he  became  Earl  of 
St.  Albans.  He  killed  an  English 
nobleman  in  a  duel  for  speaking  dis- 
paragingly of  Ireland,  and  he  would 
have  been  killed  himself  had  he  not  a 
reliquary  on  his  breast,  given  him  by 
the  Jesuit,  Fr.  Gerard. — See  Fr.  Ger- 
ard's Narrative.  See  '  Earl  Ulick's 
Tailor's  Bill  of  the  year  1578,'  in  Kilk. 
Jour,  of  Arch. 

f  Donogh  O'Brien,  4th  Earl  of  Tho- 
mond, called  the  Great  Earl,  a  person 
of  distinguished  courage,  conduct, 
loyalty,  and  worth,  highly-esteemed  by 
Elizabeth  and  James  I.  He  was 
brought  up  at  Court,  and  was  of  the 
Privy  Council  to  both  these  Princes; 
had  a  principal  share  in  the  victory  of 
Kinsale,  and  in  1605  was  made  Presi- 
dent and  Commander-in-Chief  of 
Munster.  He  d.  in  1624;  by  his  first 
wife,  a  dau.  of  Lord  Fermoy,  he  had  a 
dau.  who  was  married  to  Cormac 
McCarthy,  heir  of  Lord  Muskerry ;  by 
his  2d  wife,  a  dau.  of  the  1  ith  Earl  of 
Kildare,  he  had  Henry  and  Bryan, 
successive  Earls  of  Thomond. 


222 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Erie  of  Cloncare  b^ron  of  valentia,  created  by  this  Quene 
1565 ;  his  Erldome  extinct  for  want  of  Issue  male,  his  name  was 
McCartie.g 


Teig,  a  brother  of  Donogh,  was  long 
imprisoned  in  Limerick,  but  escaped. 
In  1599  he  was  committed  to  prison 
by  his  brother,  but  escaped  again,  and, 
with  the  O'Briens,  McNamaras,  etc., 
had  600  f.  and  50  h.  serving  against 
Elizabeth.  He  had  three  sons,  of 
whom  Turlogh  lived  at  Ballyslattery. 
His  sons-in-law  were  the  i8tlJ  Lord 
Kerry,  2d  Lord  Dunboyne,  and  Tur- 
logh Roe  McMahon. 

The  Earl's  brother,  Daniel  of  Moy- 
artie  and  Carrighychoulta,  received 
many  wounds  in  the  wars  of  Ireland, 
for  which  he  was  knighted  and  received 
considerable  grants  of  lands  in  Clare, 
and  particularly  those  of  Teig  Reagh 
McMahon  of  Thomond.  He  lived  to 
see  the  Restoration  of  Charles  II.;  and 
for  his  own  services  and  those  of  his 
children  at  home  and  abroad,  was 
created  Viscount  Clare  in  1662.  He 
mar.  a  dau.  of  the  16th  Earl  of  Des- 
mond. His  descendant,  Lord  Clare, 
received  nine  wounds  at  the  head  of  his 
famous  dragoons,  fighting  for  the  French 
at  Ramillies  in  1706. — See  Lodge. 

Florence  McCarthy  says  of  Lord 
Thomond  in  a  letter  to  Carew — '  Com- 
mend me  to  theGreat  Boar  of  Thomond.' 
Lord  Hunsden  praises  him  for  his 
'  true  nobleness  of  character.'  How- 
ever, he  kept  his  brother  Teig  in  prison 
in  Limerick,  though  the  following  went 


security  for  him,  and  Mountjoy  thought 
them  sufficient,  viz.,  the  Lord  Bishop 
of  Killalowe,  the  Lord  Burke  of  Castle- 
connell,  Turlogh  Roe  McMahound  of 
Clonderralagh,  Lord  Thomond's 
brother-in-law.  That  my  Lord  of  Tho- 
mond refuseth  to  join  with  you  in 
setting  him  at  liberty  argueth,  in  my 
conceipt,  a  desire  in  his  Lordship  to 
carry  a  more  hard  hand  towards  his 
brother  than  the  State  may  in  course 
of  justice  suffer  .  .  .  his  son  shall  re- 
main a  pledge,  for  which  purpose  I 
have  written  to  the  Council  at  Dublin. 
— Mountjoy  in  Car.  Cat. 

B  '  Onora,  Countess  of  Cloncar,  was 
wife,  sister  and  daughter  of  an  Earl, 
ever  of  verye  modest  and  good  de- 
meanure,  though  matched  with  one 
most  disorderlye  and  dissolute.' — Sir 
W.  Herbert's  Letter,  an.  1588.  Jlf  Car- 
thy  A/or,  p.  45.  The  Earl  of  Clancar 
d.  in  1596.  '  Donal,  son  of  Donal,  son 
of  Cormac,  son  of  Teig,  usually  styled 
Mac  Carthy  Mor.  His  only  child 
Ellen  mar.  Fineen,  son  of  McCarthy 
Reagh,  and  all  thought  he  was  the  heir 
of  Donal  McCarthy  Mdr.' — Annals. 
This  Earl  was  an  Irish  poet,  and  wrote 
some  pious  things ;  but  his  life  was  not 
edifying,  it  seems.  His  base  son  Donal 
claimed  to  be  McCarthy  Mdr,  and  was 
so  recognized  until  Tyrone  got  Florence 
McCarthy  elected. — See  under  Kerry 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


223 


Rorie  Erie  of  Tyrconnell,h  created  anc  i°. 

Hugh  O'Neall  Erie  of  Tyrone  baron  of  Dunganon,  created 
Erie  An"  1586;  his  eldest  Sone  is  baron  of  Dunganon.  He 
chalenged  the  Earldome  from  his  Grandfather,  Con  O'Neall, 
whom  K.  H.  8  created  Earle  of  Tiron,  restrayning  his  authority 
within  the  Countie  of  Tyrone,  which  was  afore  spread  through- 
out the  most  part  of  Ulster.  This  Con  had  divers  Sones 
Legittimat,  and  one  Illegitimate  named  Mathew,  who  was  for 
many  years  reputed  to  be  the  Sone  of  one  Kelly  of  Dundalk  a 
Smyth  ;  But  the  Woman,  which  was  Wife  to  this  Smyth,  and 
mother  to  the  foresaid  Mathew,  at  her  departure  confessed  to  a 
Priest   (as  then  the  manner  was),  and  Swore  the  Same  before 


and  Cork.  '  A  dower  was  given  to  the 
Countess,  in  1598,  of  a  third  of  the  late 
Earl's  castles,'  etc.  In  1598  Norreys 
wrote — '  The  base  son  of  the  Earl 
opposeth  himself  to  Darby  McOwen 
McCarthy  for  the  Earldom;  but  they 
agree  both  to  be  Traitors  to  her  Matye.' 

The  Bastard  was  a  dashing  soldier, 
'  the  Munster  Robin  Hood,'  the  terror 
of  the  undertakers;  was  secretly  en- 
couraged by  his  father.  He  and  the 
Earl  of  Desmond  with  2500  men 
attacked  Essex  near  Adare,  and  made 
Munster  too  hot  for  him. — See  O1  Sul- 
la'an's  Historic),  and  the  Life  of  M'  Car- 
thy  Mor  for  an  account  of  this  Donal. 

h  '  The  King  to  the  Lieutenant  of 
Ireland,  Sep.  4  1603 — To  grant  to 
Rorie  O'Donnell  and  heirs  male  of  his 
body  the  Co.  of  Tirconnell,  with  re- 
mainders to  his  brother  Cafferie  O'Don- 
nell, and  his  cousin  Donel  Oge 
McDonel  O'Donell  .  .  .  Rorie  O'D.  to 


renounce  all  claims  upon  Sir  Cahir 
O'Doherty's  and  O'Conor  Sligo's  coun- 
try, and  to  be  raised  to  the  dignity  of 
Earl  of  Tirconnell  in  tail  male,  with 
remainders  of  like  estate  to  his  brother, 
Caffery  O'D.'—  Car.  CaL,  p.  80. 

He  left  Ireland  with  Tyrone,  and  d. 
in  Rome,  where  his  tomb  is  to  be  seen 
in  the  Church  of  St.  Peter  in  Montorio. 
'  He  was  a  brave,  protecting,  warlike 
man,  and  had  often  bea:-.  in  the  gap  of 
danger  with  his  brother  Red  Hugh. 
He  was  a  generous  and  truly  hospitable 
lord,  to  whom  the  patrimony  of  his 
ancestors  did  not  seem  anything  for  his 
spending  and  feasting  parties;  he  did 
not  place  his  affections  on  wealth  and 
jewels,  but  distributed  them  among 
those  who  needed  them,  whether  mighty 
or  feeble.'  He  died  in  Rome  on  the 
28th  of  July  1608,  'after  exemplary 
penance,'  etc. — Annals.  After  the 
battle  of  Kinsale  he  commanded  his 


2  24  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Witnesses,  that  her  Sone  Mathew,  reputed  to  be  the  Smythes 
Sone,  was  the  Sone  of  Con  Oneall,  whereupon  Con  O'Neall 
accepted  of  him  as  of  his  Sone,  and  adopted  him  into  the  Familie 
and  name  of  O'Nealls,  to  whom  his  pretended  Father  procured 
from  H.  8  Legitimation,  and  being  elder  than  the  Ligittimat 
Children,  was  preferred  to  them  in  Succession  to  the  Earldome, 
and  made  baron  of  Dunganon.  But  the  Legittimat  disdayning 
that  a  bastard  should  be  preferred  to  them,  conspired  against 
him  and  Slue  him,  The  eldest  of  whom,  named  Shane  O'Neall, 
usurped  the  Authoritie  and  Title  of  O'Neall,  and  kept  it  during 
his  Life,  whom  Ouene  Eliz.  continuallie  did  prosecute  to  have 
placed  this  man  as  Successor  to  his  Grand  Father,  which  at 
Length  she  performed,  and  was  for  her  princelie  favor  verie 
unworthily  by  him  requited. 


VISCOUNTS. 

Sr    James     Barrhy,k     L.     Barrhy,    baron    of   Ibaun,    Viscount 
Buttevant. 

brother's  followers.  He  was  a  bold  '  See  under  the  Co,  of  Tyrone,  and 
and  dexterous  swordsman,  as  his  brave  in  the  Introduction,  some  account  of 
cousin  and  enemy,  Nial  Garve  (himself  this  '  Archrebel,'  Hugh  of  Tyrone. 
'  vir  animo  magno  et  audaci,')  had  k  '  The  Barry  Mdr,  who  was  in  cap- 
reason  to  know.  O'Sullevan,  p.  220,  tivity  in  Dublin,  d.  in  1581  ;  he  was  of 
describes  an  extraordinary  fight  be-  the  true  stock  of  the  Barry  Roes,  yet 
tween  him  and  two  horsemen  on  one  had  in  the  beginning  no  hope  of  ob- 
side,  and  8  English  foot  on  the  other,  taining  even  the  title  of  Barry  Roe. 
He  slew  all  the  English,  and  for  a  long  But  God  bestowed  upon  him  the  chief- 
time  he  fought  with  their  brave  leader,  tainship  both  of  Barry  Maol  and  Barry 
and,  not  being  able  to  pierce  his  corse-  Roe,  and  he  was  elected  chief  over  the 
let,  he  held  him  under  water  till  he  sept  of  Barry  Mdr  when  the  true  heirs 
drowned  him.  of  that  chieftainship   became   extinct. 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


225 


Sir  David  de  la  Rup,  L.  Roch,  Baron  of  Poulescastle,  Viscount 

of  Armoy.1 
Christofer  Preston,  L:  Baron  and  Viscount  of  Gormanstone."1 


His  son  David  was  afterwards  called 
'  The  Barry '  by  the  Earl  of  Desmond, 
and  his  second  son  was  lord  over  the 
Barry  Roes." — Annals,  p.  1753. 

He  was  first  on  the  side  of  the 
Desmonds;  but  he  flung  himself  on  the 
English  side  afterwards.  He  was  a 
deadly  enemy  of  Florence  McCarthy, 
in  whose  'Life'  will  be  found  many 
letters  of  Barry's. 

This  David  Fitzjames  Barry  Vis- 
count Buttevant  and  Barrymore,  suc- 
ceeded his  father  in  1581  ;  his  eldest 
brother  was  deaf  and  dumb,  and  died 
in  1622;  his  brother  William  lived  at 
Lislee ;  his  three  sisters  were  m.  to 
Viscount  Fermoy,  O'Sullevan  Beare, 
and  Condon  of  Ballymac-Patrick.  In 
1599  Lord  Buttevant,  that  his  brother 
John  might  be  subject  to  the  Crown  of 
England,  gave  him  and  his  heirs  male 
the  manors,  castles,  etc.,  of  Liscarroll, 
Ballymacow,  etc.  He  d.  at  Barry's 
Court  in  1617.  His  son  David  mar.  a 
d.  of  Lord  Poer;  his  sons-in-law  were 
Gerald  FitzGerald  of  the  Decies, 
Browne  of  Mulranken  in  Wexford,  John 
son  of  Lord  Poer,  Thomas  Earl  of 
Ormond,  Tobin  of  Cumshinagh,  Co. 
Tipperary,  and  Sir  J.  FitzGerald  of 
Ballymaloe,  Co.  of  Cork. — Lodge. 

'  Recte  Fermoy.  '  As  for  the  Lord 
Roche,  if  I  have  any  judgment  in  me, 
I  do  not  think  any  nobleman  within 


the  province  of  Munster  to  be  more 
assured  to  the  Crown  of  England, 
which  all  his  actions  do  manifest;  for  I 
have  not  the  company  of  any  one  of  his 
rank  so  much  as  of  himself;  and  there- 
fore the  Viscount  is  much  wronged.' — 
Careiu  in  1602;  Car.  Cal.,  p.  409. 

Carew  wrote  in  1600,  that  'he  was 
only  in  personal  show  a  subject' 

However,  his  base  sons  became 
'Robin  Hoods'  in  1597.  'L.  Roche 
that  now  is  (158S)  hath  mar.  the  syster 
of  Finyan  McCarthy's  mother,  by  which 
kindred  Finyan  is  strongly  allied.  By 
her,  who  was  a  syster  of  James  Fitz- 
Morris,  he  had  a  son,  and  a  dau.  mar. 
to  McDonoghe  Lord  of  Dowalla.' — St. 
Leger's  Letter  in  Life  of  Mac  Car  thy  Mbr. 

'The  Roche,  i.e.,  Maurice  son  of 
David,  d.  in  1600,  a  mild  and  comely 
man,  learned  in  the  Latin,  Irish,  and 
English  languages.  His  son  David 
took  his  place. '• — Annals,  p.  2187. 

The  castle  at  Castletown  Roche  was 
the  chief  seat  of  Roche.  There  is  (or 
was)  a  stone  near  the  parish  church 
with  the  inscription — '  Orate  pro  bono 
statu  Domini  Maurici  Roche  Vicecomes 
de  Fermoy  et  Dominae  Elionoriae 
Mauricii  et  pro  anima  ejus  Anno 
Domini  1585.' — Pari.  Gaz.  of  Lreland, 
under  Castletown  Roche. 

m  'Whereunto  is  lately  annexed  the 
Barony   of  Loundres,   their    ancestor, 

2   F 


226 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Sr  Richard  Butler,"  Viscount  of  Mountgerat. 

Sr  Morrice  Fitzgerrald,  Viscount  Dessie  and  baron  of  Dromane,0 

extinct  without  Issue  male. 
Eustace,  Viscount  of  Baltinglas  and  L:  of  Kilcullen,  extinct  by 

attainder.11 


LORDS. 


Lord  Bremingham,'1  Baron  of  Athenrie. 


then  Chief  Baron  of  the  Exchequer, 
was  made  Knight  in  the  field  by  Lionel 
Duke  of  Clarence,  Lieutenant  of  Ire- 
land.'—  Campion.  Christopher  was  the 
4th  Viscount,  and  succeeded  in  1559, 
and  was  succeeded  by  Jenico,  whose 
brother  Thomas  was  created  Viscount 
Tara.  'Young  Viscount  Gormanston 
was  committed  to  the  Castle  in  1605 
for  contriving  with  Sir  P.  Barnwall  and 
others  a  Petition  of  the  Pale  in  favour 
of  freedom  of  religion.  His  brother 
was  an  officer  in  Tyrone's  Regiment  in 
the  Netherlands.' — Car.  Cal. 

n  See  supra,  p.  67. 

Edmund  2d  Viscount  Mountgarrett 
m.  a  dau.  of  the  ist  Baron  of  Upper 
Ossory;  in  the  Parliament  of  1559  he 
represented  Carlow;  in  1602  he  was 
buried  in  Kilkenny  Cathedral ;  he  had 
8  sons  and  8  daughters. 

Richard,  his  son  and  successor, 
was  20  years  old  in  1598,  when  he 
sided  with  O'Neil,  his  father-in-law ;  he 
joined  the  Confederates  in   1642,  and 


died  in  1652,  and  though  dead  was 
exempted  by  Cromwell's  Act  of  Par- 
liament from  pardon  for  life  or  estate. 
He  lies  buried  under  a  handsome 
monument  in  the  Chancel  of  St  Canice. 
He  had  3  sons  and  5  daughters. 

His  brother  Theobald  of  Tynehinch 
m.  a  dau.  of  FitzGerald  of  Queen's  Co. ; 
his  sisters  were  m.  to  Walter  Earl  of 
Ormond  ;  Shee  of  Upper  Court ;  Mor- 
gan McBryan  Cavanagh,  Chief  of  the 
Sept,  called  Sleight  Dermot,  of  Polo- 
monty  in  Carlow;  to  O'Connor;  to 
Daton  of  Kilmodalin  in  Kilkenny;  to 
O.  Grace  of  Carney  in  Tipperary,  son 
and  heir  to  Gerald  Grace  of  Liegan ;  to 
Viscount  Galway ;  to  O'Farrell  of  Ballin- 
tobber,  son  of  O'Farrell  Bane  of  the 
Annaly. — Archdall. 

The  Keep  of  Mountgarrett's  castle,  in 
Wexford,  near  New  Ross,  is  still  in  a 
tolerable  state  of  preservation. 

0  See  supra  '  Waterford,'  p.  160. 

p  See  supra,  p.  45. 

q  Now  degenerate  and  become  meere 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


227 


Fleming"  baron  of  Slaine. 

Plunkets  baron  of  Killeyne. 

Sr  Christofer  Nugent,'  Baron  of  Delvin. 

Sr  Christofer  S'-  Laurence,"  L:  of  Hoth. 


Irishe,  against  whom  his  ancestors 
served  valiantlyin  An.  1300. — Campion. 
Edmund,  15th  Baron,  sat  as  the 
aunciaitcst  Baron  of  Ireland  in  the  Par- 
liament of  1585.  He  mar.  a  sister  to 
Sir  Roger  O'Shaghnessie,  and  had  three 
sons,  Richard,  Meyler  Buy,  and 
Thomas  Duffe. 

Richard  the  16th  Baron,  born  in 
1570,  died  in  1635,  and  was  buried  in 
the  Abbey  of  Athenry.  The  2  2d  Baron 
lived  at  Turlovaughan,  near  Tuam,  in 
the  year  1754. 

Meyler  Buy  Bermingham  of  Con- 
nagher  got  from  his  brother,  the  16th 
Baron,  in  1595,  Dalgan  and  other  lands 
in  the  Barony  of  Dunmore.  He  m.  a 
dau.  of  Mac  Jordan  of  Tobrachan,  in 
Mayo,  and  had  7  sons.  Thomas  Duffe 
B.  mar.  a  dau.  of  Burke  of  Clochrooke. 
— ArchdalPs  Lodge. 

'  A  Lord  Slane  betrayed  Archbishop 
O'Hurley  arc.  1584;  in  1597  a  Lord 
Slane  sent  to  the  Lord  Deputy  the  heads 
of  two  rebels;  in  1605  a  L.  Slane 
signed  the  '  Petition  of  the  Papists  of 
the  Pale.' — See  Car.  Col.,  an.  1597 
and  Cal.  of  S.  Papers,  1605. 

s  'This  family  came  of  the  Danes, 
whereof  they  have  as  yet  special  monu- 
ments.'—  Campion.  Christopher,  9th 
Lord  of  Killeen,  mar.  a  sister  of  Dillon, 
i5t  Earl  of  Roscommon;  in  1598  he 


was  made  '  Knight  Marshall  of  the 
Camp;'  he  d.  in  1613,  leaving  Lucas 
Mor,  Is'  Earl  of  Fingal;  Patrick,  Catho- 
lic Bishop  of  Meath,  who  d.  in  1679; 
and  Nicholas,  a  lawyer. — Lodge,  under 
Lord  Dunsany. 

Christopher,    9th    Baron,   was   made 
Captain  of  Slewght  William  in  Annaly 
in  1565;  was  ordered  in  1567  to  help  to 
extirpate  the  O' Mores,  sons  of  Ferrass 
McRosse,  and  to  lead  in  person  150 
kerne,  10  horsemen,  and  50  boys  of  his 
own  choice;  in  1580  was  sent  a  prisoner 
to  the  Tower  on  suspicion  of  corres- 
pondence with  the  Leinster  Insurgents  ; 
in  1593   brought  20  horsemen  to  the 
hosting  at  Tara,  with  the  Nugents,  his 
kinsmen.     For  his  '  valorous  services ' 
he  got,    in    1597,   forfeited    lands    in 
Longford   and   Cavan.       He   had   m. 
Mary,  dau.  of  the  11th  Earl  of  Kildare, 
by  whom  he  had    six   sons   and    six 
daughters.     He  died  in  Aug.  1602. — 
Lodge.     He  d.  a   prisoner  in    Dublin 
Castle,  to  which  he  was  committed  on 
a   charge  of  having  assisted   Tyrone. 
His  son  was  first  Earl  of  Westmeath, 
about    whom    consult    Fr.    Meehan's 
Flight  of  the  Earls. 

u  Rede  Sir  Nicholas,  the  father  of 
Christopher.  He  was  the  21st  Lord, 
who  d.  in  1606  ;  he  brought  6  archers 
on  horseback  for  Howth,  and   1    for 


228 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


O'Bryan/  baron  of  Inchequyn. 
Barnwall™  Baron  of  Tribleston. 
Butler,*  Baron  of  Caer. 


Killester,  to  the  hosting  at  Tara.  His 
son  Christopher,  2  2d  Baron,  served 
as  a  colonel  of  foot  under  Essex  and 
Mountjoy.  Camden  tells  us  that  this 
Christopher  was  one  of  the  friends  who 
accompanied  Essex  on  his  visit  to 
Nonsuch,  and  that  he  offered  to  kill 
Lord  Grey,  an  enemy  of  Essex,  and 
then  to  kill  Cecil  at  the  Queen's  Court. 
— See  The  Flight  of  the  Earls  for  a 
sketch  of  this  nobleman's  career. 

v  Dermot,  5th  Baron,  was  4  years  old 
in  1598.  His  son  Morogh  became 
famous  as  Earl  of  Inchiquin;  his  father, 
Morogh,  was  slain  in  1597  by  O'Don- 
nell's  soldiers,  while  trying  with  the 
English  army  to  cross  the  Erne.  He 
was,  by  order  of  O'Donnell  and  the 
Catholic  Bishops  of  Deny  and  Raphoe, 
buried  with  reverence  and  honour  in 
the  Franciscan  Monastery  of  Donegal, 
having  been  previously  buried  by  the 
Cistercians  in  their  Monastery  of  As- 
seroe — the  reason  was  that  the  Baron's 
ancestors  had  been  buried  in  the  Fran- 
ciscan Monastery  in  his  country. — 
Annals,  pp.  2027,  2047. 

Dermot  mar.  a  dau.  of  Sir  Edmund 
FitzEdmond  of  Cloyne.  In  the  Life 
of  Lady  Falkland,  whose  husband  was 
Lord  Deputy  in  1622,  I  find  that,  'In 
Ireland  she  grew  acquainted  with  .my 
Lord  of  Inchiquin,  an  exceeding  good 
Catholic,  and  the  first  (at  least  knowing 
one)   she   had   yet   met.      She   highly 


esteemed  him  for  his  wit,  learning,  and 
judgment,  though  he  were  but  about 
nine-and-twenty  years  old  when  he  died. 
Her  Lord  did  the  same,  admiring  him 
much  as  a  man  of  so  sincere  and 
upright  a  conscience,  that  he  seemed  to 
look  on  whatever  was  not  lawful  as  not 
possible ;  he  did  somewhat  shake  her 
supposed  security  in  esteeming  it  law- 
ful to  continue  as  she  was.' — Life  of  Lady 
Falkland,  p.  23. 

w  Peter,  6th  Baron  of  Trimlestown,  d. 
on  Good  Friday  1598;  his  mother  was  a 
dau.  of  Taylor  of  Swords  ;  by  his  wife, 
a  sister  of  Lord  Delvin's,  he  had  a  son 
Robert,  the  7th  Lord,  who  was  24  years 
old  in  1598,  and  mar.  to  Miss  Talbot 
of  Dardistown.  Peter,  in  his  will,  left 
^10  to  be  divided  among  poor  priests 
and  friars,  and  40J.  to  Bishop  Brady. 
Sir  P.  Barnwall  of  Turvey,  Dublin,  was 
one  of  a  family  of  18  children  ;  his  wife 
was  a  sister  of  Marshal  Bagnal ;  his  son 
became  ist  Viscount  Kingsland ;  his 
sisters  were  wives  of  Lords  Dunsany, 
Roscommon,  and  Howth ;  of  the 
Knights  Fitzgerald  of  Tecroghan, 
Draicot  of  Momington,  and  Masterson 
of  Ferns,  of  Thomas  and  John  Finglas 
of  Westpalston,  Stanihurst  of  Corduff, 
Delahyde  of  Moyglare,  and  R.  Beling. 
— See  Lodge,  vol.  5,  p.  46.  See  the 
curious  Barnewall  monument  in  Lusk. 

x  '  Theobald  Butler,  Lord  of  Cahair- 
Duna-Iascaigh  and  Trian-chluana-meala 


THE  NOBLEMEN  OF  IRELAND. 


229 


Courcy,y  L:  Courcy. 

L.  Burkez  of  Castle-conell. 


(Cahir  and  Clonmel-third),  d.  in  1596  ; 
a  bounteous  man,  he  had  the  largest 
collection  of  poetical  compositions  of 
almost  all  the  old  English  of  Ireland ; 
his  son  Thomas  took  his  place.' — An- 
nals, p.  1997.  The  sisters  of  Thomas, 
4*  Baron,  were  mar.  to  Butler  of  Bally- 
boe  and  Sir  Cormac  McCarthy  of 
Blarney ;  his  brother  James  Galdie  was 
engaged  in  the  risings  of  1598  and 
1 64 1  ;  his  castle  of  Cahir  was  besieged 
and  taken  by  Essex.  He  mar.  a  sister 
of  Lord  Mountgarrett. — Lodge,  vol.  6, 
p.  219.  His  brother  Edmund  lived  at 
Cloghcully. 

'  Mr.  Piers  Butler  of  Knock-in-anama, 
wch  is  his  chefe  house.  He  is  son  to 
the  Lo:  of  Caher,  and  brother  to  the 
Lo.  of  Caher  that  now  is ;  his  liveing 
stands  in  the  com"  of  Tipperary.  nere 
the  towne  of  Clounmell.' — Florence 
McCarthy;  see  his  Life.  He  was 
deeply  concerned  in  the  rising  of  1598, 
and  Carew  was  anxious  to  seize  his 
person  and  his  castle. 

y  '  Curcy,  Baron  of  Ringrone,  now 
reduced  by  the  fluctuation  of  human 
affairs. ' —  Camden. 

Gerald  de  Courcy,  17th  Baron  of 
Kinsale,  son  of  the  16th  Lord,  and  Seive, 
dau.  of  MacCarthy  of  Dowallagh,  suc- 
ceeded in  1535;  at  the  siege  of  Boulogne 
he  commanded  an  Irish  Regiment 
under  Henry  8,  and  for  his  bravery  was 
knighted  by  the  King  on  the  field, 
under  the   Royal  Standard  displayed, 


the  most  distinguished  manner  of 
receiving  Knighthood ;  but  by  his 
great  expenses  in  serving  the  Crown 
he  considerably  lessened  his  estate. 
He  died  at  a  very  advanced  age  in 
1599;  his  wife  was  dau.  of  Cormac 
McDonogh  McCarthy  of  Carbery;  Mary, 
his  only  child,  m.  Donogh  O'Driscol. 

John,  18th  Baron  of  Kinsale  (was 
son  of  Edmond  Oge  of  Kilnaclone,  and 
his  wife,  dau.  of  Dermod  McTeig 
O'Hurley,  Chief  of  his  Sept),  succeeded 
in  1599 ;  fought  on  the  English  side  at 
Kinsale ;  m.  a  dau.  of  O'Cruley  of 
Carbery,  Chief  of  his  Sept ;  and  he  died 
in  1628,  and  was  buried  in  the  Abbey 
of  Timoleague. — Lodge. 

1  In   1 59 1    Lord    Castleconnell   was 
slain. 
John  Bourke,  Lord  Castleconnell,  was  basely 

slain 
By  Captain  Arnold  Crosby,  for  they  twain 
Resolved  to  fight ;  but  Crosby  stops,  demurs — 
Prays  Castleconnell  to  take  off  his  spurs, 
And  as  he  stooped,  yielding  to  his  request, 
Crosby  most  basely  stabbed  him  in  the  breast; 
Gave  twenty-one,  all  dreadful  wounds — base 

act! 
And  Crosby's  only  hanged  for  the  horrid  fact. 
— Davis's  Annals  of  Limerick,  quoted 
by  Mr.  Lenihan,  p.  121. 

'  In  the  days  that  Essex  was  storming 
Cahir-Duine-Iasaigh  (1599),  Sir  T. 
Norris  came  to  Kilmallock,  and  was 
in  the  practice  of  scouring  the  hills  of 
Limerick  every  other  day  to  see  whether 
he  could  kill  or  capture  any  enemies. 
He  fell  in,  near  Kilteely,  with  Thomas 


230 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Eustace33  Viscount  of  Baltinglas  and  L.  of  Kilcollen, 

extinct  by  attainder. 
Patrick  Fitzgerraldbb  baron  of  Lixsnaw. 
McKilpatrickcc  baron  of  upper  Ossyry. 


Burke,  son  of  Theobald,  son  of  William, 
son  of  Edmond  of  Castleconnell,  neither 
being  in  search  of  the  other.  Thomas 
was  on  horseback  at  the  head  of  100 
Irish  foot ;  he  was  attacked  by  Norris, 
who  slew  20  of  his  people,  but  Norris 
was  mortally  wounded. 

'  Dermot  O'Connor  led  some  of 
O'Neill's  soldiers  into  Munster  in  1600. 
When  the  Baron  of  Castleconnell 
(Richard,  son  of  Theobald,  etc.),  heard 
of  Dermot's  arrival  in  Owney  and 
Clanwilliam,  he  and  his  brother  Thomas 
mustered  horse  and  foot  of  his  own  and 
the  Queen's  people,  and  fought  Der- 
mot from  the  Monastery  of  Owney  to 
the  bridge  of  Bun-briste.  As  the  Baron 
and  his  brother  advanced  with  pride 
across  the  bridge  of  Bunbriste  in  front 
of  their  own  forces,  they  were  put  to 
the  sword.  A  cause  of  lamentation ; 
for  though  they  were  young  they  were 
manly  in  renown  and  noble  deeds.' — 
Annals,  pp.  2115,  2145. 

"*  Vide  supra  note  p. 

bb  'Mac  Maurice  of  Kerry,  i.e.,  Pa- 
trickin,  son  of  Thomas,  d.  in  1600,  in 
the  prime  of  life,  after  having  joined 
the  Earl  of  Desmond  in  the  war.  It 
was  a  cause  of  lamentation  that  a  man 
of  his  personal  form,  blood,  and  hos- 
pitality should  thus  die  in  his  youth ;  his 
son  Thomas  took  his  place.     Patrickin 


in  1590  succeeded  his  father,  who  was 
the  best  purchaser  of  wine,  horses,  and 
literary  works  of  any  of  his  wealth  at 
that  time.' — Annals,  pp.  1893,  2177. 

This  Patrickin,  17th  Lord  Kerry,  was 
b.  in  1 541  ;  was  sent  as  a  hostage  to 
Queen  Mary;  bred  at  the  English  Court, 
was  favoured  by  Elizabeth,  but  getting 
leave  to  see  his  father  in  1561,  he  took 
up  arms  against  the  English  ;  in  1599 
he  was  at  the  head  of  500  foot  and  30 
h.  He  died  of  grief  at  seeing  the 
English  take  one  of  his  castles,  and  he 
was  buried  with  his  uncle,  Donal  Earl 
of  Clancarre,  in  the  Franciscan  Friery 
of  Irrinlagh.  By  his  wife,  dau.  of  Lord 
Fermoy,  he  had  3  sons  and  2  dau. ;  the 
daughters  were  m.  to  O'Sullevan  Mdr 
and  the  son  of  McCarthy  Mdr.  His 
son  Thomas,  born  in  1574,  mar.  a  sister 
of  the  Earl  of  Thomond;  at  his  father's 
death  was  promised  pardon  on  con- 
dition that  he  would  perform  such 
service  as  would  deserve  them,  but  he 
absolutely  refused,  because  '  it  stood 
not  with  his  conscience;'  after  that  he 
retired  to  the  North,  and  came  to  Kin- 
sale  as  a  commander  in  O'Donnell's 
army.  After  the  defeat  of  Kinsale,  he 
was  beaten  out  of  his  castle  of  Lixnaw. 
He  was  pardoned  by  King  James,  and 
in  1630  d.  and  was  buried  in  the 
Chapel    and    Tomb    of    St.    Cormac 


THE   NOBLEMEN    OF    IRELAND. 


23I 


Plunket  L:  Barondrt  of  Dunsany. 
Butleree  Baron  of  Dunboyne. 
L.  Power  Baronff  of  Corrao/hmore. 
Plunket  L.  Baron  of  Louth .gg 


McCullenan.  He  was  married,  first  to  a 
dau.  of  the  Earl  of  Thomond,  2ly  to  a 
dau.  of  Lord  Poer  of  Curraghmore;  and 
he  had  7  sons  and  4  daughters. — 
Lodge. 

cc  See  p.  79.  He  succeeded  as  3rd 
Baron  in  1581 ;  he  m.  a  dau.  of  Patrick 
O'More  of  Leix,  head  of  that  Sept,  or, 
as  some  say,  a  dau.  of  Ruary  O'More, 
and  had  issue  5  sons  and  2  daughters. 
His  sons  were,  i°  Teig,  who  m.  a  dau. 
of  Sir  E.  Butler  of  Tullow  ;  2°  John  of 
Castletown  ;  30  Geoffry  of  Ballyraghin, 
m.  to  a  dau.  of  Fergus  Farrell  of  Tene- 
lick,  in  the  Co.  of  Longford,  who  was 
widow  of  Sir  J.  O'Reilly ;  40  Bryan  of 
Water  Castle ;  50  Edmund  of  Castle 
Fleming.  His  dau.  Catherine  m.  (in 
1592)  Eustace  of  Newland,  in  Kildare; 
and  his  dau.  Joan  m.  the  heir  of  Lord 
Dunboyne. 

dd  Patrick,  7th  Lord,  'a  person  of 
learning,  and  a  patron  of  learning  and 
learned  men.' — Stany  hurst.  In  1601 
he  commanded  a  company  of  Irish  in 
English  pay;  took  away  1600  cows 
from  M'Mahon,  but  being  attacked  by 
140  men,  he  lost  the  prey  and  50  men, 
'but  not  one  good  subject.'  His  wife 
was  11th  dau.  of  Sir  C.  Barnwall. — 
Lodge. 

ee  James,  2nd  Lord  ;  by  his  first  wife, 
a  dau.  of  Lord  Upper  Ossory,  he  had 


5  sons  and  3  daughters ;  by  his  2d  wife 
(a  dau.  of  Lord  Thomond),  he  had  6 
sons  and  3  daughters. 

"  Richard,  Lord  Poer,  mar.  to  a  dau. 
of  Lord  Buttevant,  d.  in  1607  ;  his  son 
and  heir  was  killed  by  the  White 
Knight.  His  father,  whose  wife  was  a 
dau.  of  the  15th  Lord  Desmond,  was 
thus  spoken  of  by  Sir  H.  Sydney  in 

1575:— 

'  I  lodged  at  Corraghmore,  the  house 
that  the  Lord  Power  is  Baron  of,  where 
I  was  so  used  with  such  plenty  and 
good  order  entertained  (as  adding  to 
the  quiet  of  all  the  country  adjoining, 
by  the  same  people  called  the  Power 
Country),  it  may  well  be  compared 
with  the  best  ordered  country  in  the 
English  Pale.  And  the  lord  of  the 
country,  though  he  be  of  scope  of 
ground  a  far  less  territory  than  his 
neighbour  is,  yet  he  lives  in  shew  far 
more  honourably  and  plentifully  than 
he  or  any  other  whatsoever  he  be  of 
his  calling  that  lives  in  this  province.' 

se  '  On  the  western  face  of  the  Barons- 
town  Cross,  beneath  a  figure  of  St. 
Patrick,  we  read — "  I  pray  you,  St. 
Patrick,  pray  for  the  soules  of  Oliver 
Plunket  Lord  Baron  of  Louth,  and 
Dame  Jenet  Dowdall,  his  wife.  This 
cross  was  builded  by  Dame  Janet  Dow- 
dall,  late   wife   unto   Oliver   Plunket, 


23: 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


L:  Savage  Baron  of1* 


Lord  Baron  of  Louth,  for  him  and 
herselfe,  in  the  yere  of  Our  Lord 
God"  .  .  .' 

Underneath  a  rude  image  of  St. 
Peter  on  the  east  side — '  I  pray  you, 
St.  Peter,  pray  for  the  soules  of  Oliver 
Plunket,'  etc.  On  the  back  is  the 
'  Hail  Mary.' 

This  Oliver  was  the  4th  Lord ;  he 
died  in  1607;  his  2nd  wife  was  a  daugh- 
ter of  Dowdall  of  Termonfeighan ;  by 
his  first  wife,  a  dau.  of  Marshal  Bagenal, 
he  had  5  children.' — See  Lodge  and 
Sir  IV.  Wilde's  Boyne  and  Blackwater. 

hh  Lord  of  Ardes.     See  p.  10. 

Campion  adds — '  Mac  Suretan,  Lord 
of  Deseret,  whom  Sir  H.  Sydney  called 


Jordan  de  Exeter.  This  was  Lord  in 
the  time  of  Lionel,  Duke  of  Clarence, 
An.  1361 — now  very  wilde  Irish.'  Mac 
Costilaghe,  L.  Nangle,  whom  Sir  H. 
Sidney  called  the  Angulo,  now  very 
Irish.  Mac  William  Burke,  Lord  of 
Eichter,  Connaught,  now  very  Irish. — 
Campion. 

Baronets. 
Saintleger,  of  Slemarge,  meere  Irish. 
Den  of  Pormanston,  waxing  Irish. 
FitzGerald  of  Burnchurch.  Welleslye 
of  Narraghe.  Hussee  of  Galtrim.  St 
Michell  of  Reban.  Marwarde  of 
Scryne.  Nangle  of  the  Navan. — Cam- 
pion. 


THE    BISHOPS    AND    ARCHBISHOPS. 


:JO 


THE  NAMES  OF  B.—  AND  ARCH-B.— 

The  Archb.  of    Armagh,    Primat  of  all   Ireland,    his  name   is 

Henrie  Usher.a 
The  Archb.  of  Dublin,  Primate  of  Ireland,  his  name  is  Thomas 

Jones, b  now  L.  Chancellor. 
The  Archb.  of  Cashel.c 


a  Bom  in  Dublin;  Abp.  (1595-1613). 
He  had  sons,  Richard  and  Luke  ;  to 
Luke  'he  had  disposed  of  his  Arch- 
deaconry of  Dublin.'  He  was  in  great 
Honour  and  Repute  among  all  Pro- 
testants.—  Ware. 

b  Recte  Adam  Loftus,  b.in  Yorkshire; 
Abp.  (1567-1605),  and  Jones  suc- 
ceeded. Nominated  Abp.  of  Armagh 
1561,  at  the  age  of  28  ;  Abp.  of  Dublin 
in  1567;  Lord  Chancellor  (1578-1605). 
By  his  wife,  Miss  Purdon  of  Lurgan- 
Race,  Louth,  he  had  20  children — 1. 
Dudley,  of  Rathfarnham  Castle,  which 
was  built  by  the  Abp.  2.  Edward,  Ser- 
geant-at-Law  and  Knight,  who  d.  at  siege 
of  Kinsale.  3.  Adam,  a  captain  of  horse, 
killed  in  Byrne's  country  in  1599.  4 
and  5 — Henry  and  Thomas,  twins. 
Thomas  was  of  Killyan,  Co.  Meath ; 
was  Constable  of  Wicklow  Castle  in 
1596;  he  m.  a  sister  of  Piers  Hartpole 
ofCarlow.  His  daughters  were — 1.  Isa- 
bella, m.  to  W°-  Ussher,  Clerk  of  the 
Council.  2.  Anne,  m.  to  Sir  H.  Colley 
of  Castle  Carbery,  Blount  of  Kidder- 


minster, and  Lord  Blayney.  3.  Cathe- 
rine, m.  to  Sir  F.  Berkeley  of  Askeaton, 
and  H.  Berkeley,  Esq.  4.  Martha, 
m.  to  Sir  T.  Colclough  of  Tinterne 
Abbey.  5.  Dorothy,  m.  to  Sir  J. 
Moore  of  Croghan.  6.  Alicia,  to  Sir 
H.  Warren  of  Warrenston  or  Ballybrett. 
7.  Margaret,  to  Sir  G.  Colley  of  Eden- 
derry. — Archdall's  Lodge,  vol.  7,  p.  246. 

His  '  great  qualities  were  something 
tarnished  by  his  excessive  Ambition 
and  Avarice.  For,  besides  his  pro- 
motions in  the  Church  and  his  publick 
employments  in  the  State,  he  grasped 
at  everything  that  became  void,  either 
for  himself  or  Family.' — Ware. 

c  Miler  Magragh,  born  in  Fermanagh, 
ex-Franciscan,  Abp.  of  Cashel,  and 
Bp.  of  Emly  (1570  to  1622);  he  had 
also  Waterford  and  Lismore  in  com- 
mendam  (1582-1589,  and  1592-1607). 
In  16 1 1  he  got  a  coadjutor,  W"1  Knight, 
who  soon  after  '  appeared  Drunk  in 
publick,  and  thereby  exposed  himself 
to  the  scorn  and  derision  of  the  People;' 
'  and  returned  to  England.'      Magrath 

2  G 


234 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 

The  Archb.  of  Toam.d 


THE  BISHOPS. 
The  B.  of  Meath  and  Clonem°knois,  his  name  ise 
The  Bishop  of  Derry,  his  name  is  Montgomerie.' 
The  B.  of  Ardagh,  Draper/ 


made  the  most  scandalous  wastes  and 
alienations  of  the  Revenues  and  Manors 
belonging  to  his  See.  He  erected  a 
Monument  for  himself  in  his  Cathedral, 
with  the  strange  inscription  written  by 
himself — 

'  Venerat  in  Dunum  primo  sanctissimus  olim, 
Patricius,  nostri  gloria  magna  soli, 
Huic  ego  succedens,  utinam  tarn  sanctus  ut  ille, 
Sic  Duni  primo  tempore  Praesul  eram. 
Anglia !   lustra  decern  sed  post   tua   sceptra 

Colebam, 
Principibus  placui,  Marte  tonante,  ruis. 
Hie,  ubi  sum  positus,  non  sum,  sum  non  ubi 

non  sum  ; 
Sum  nee  in  ambobus,  sum  sed  utroque  loco. 
1621. 

Dominus  est  qui  me  judicat.  1  Cor.  4. 
Qui  stat,  caveat  ne  cadat. ' — Ware. 
Called  'Meillmorre  McCragh,'  by 
Tyrone;  'an  ex-Friar,  an  avaricious 
and  unprincipled  man,  and  a  most 
unscrupulous  waster  of  the  patrimony 
of  the  Sees  under  his  administration ; 
held  4  bishopricks  and  a  great  number 
of  benefices  in  various  dioceses.  He 
m.  Amy,  dau.  of  O'Meara  of  Lisany, 
Co.  Tipperary,  and  had  issue — Tur- 
logh,  Redmond,  Bryan,  Mark,  Mary, 
Cicely,  Anne,  and  Eliza.  His  sons,  or 
at  least  some  of  them,  relapred  to 
Popery.' — Cotton's  Fasti. 


d  Nehemiah  Donellan,  born  in  Gal- 
way,  bred  at  Cambridge,  Abp.  from 
1595  to  1609,  when  he  voluntarily 
resigned. —  Ware. 

e  Thomas  Jones,  b.  in  Lancashire ; 
Bp.  (1584-1605).  His  monument  in 
St.  Patrick's  Cathedral  has  the  inscrip- 
tion— '  Thomas  Jones,  Archiepiscopus 
Dublin,  Primas  et  Metropolitanus  Hi- 
berniae,  Ejusdem  Cancellarius  .   .  .' 

Margareta,  ejusdem  Thomae  Uxor 
Charissima  obiit  decimo  quinto  Decem- 
bris,  Anno  a  partu  Virginis  1618.  Jones 
had  6  children ;  his  son,  Sir  Roger  of 
Durhamstown,  Westmeath,  was  made 
Viscount  Ranelagh  in  1628;  his 
daughters  were  mar.  to  Uomville,  Clerk 
of  the  Hanaper,  and  Piers  of  Trister- 
nagh,  Westmeath. — -ArchdalFs  Lodge, 
v.,  p.  301. 

'  He  laid  the  Foundation  of  a  fair 
estate.' — Harris's  Addition  to  Ware. 

'  Vacant  in  1598;  Dr.  Montgomerie, 
b.  in  Scotland,  was  Bp.  from  1605 
to  1610,  as  well  as  of  Raphoe  and 
Clogher. 

B  Vacant  in  1598.  Robert  Draper, 
Rector  of  Trim  in  1598,  Bp.  of  Ardagh 
and  Kilmore  (1603-16 12). —  Ware. 


THE    BISHOPS    AND    ARCHBISHOPS. 


235 


The  B.  of  Kilmore,g  the  same  man  hath  both. 

The  B.  of  Clogher/  united  with  Derrie. 

The  B.  of  Doune,  his  name  is  D.  Tod.h 

The  B.  of  Connor,h  the  same  man. 

The  B.  of  Raboo/  united  to  Derrie. 

The  B.  of  Dromore,h  united  to  Downe. 

All  these  are  under  the  Archbishop  of  Armagh. 

The  B.  of  Glandelagh,  annexed  to  the  Archb.  of  Dublin. 
The  B.  of  Kildare,  his  name  is  Pilsworth.' 
The  B.  of  Femes,  his  name  is  Mr  Ram.k 
The  B.  of  Ossorie,  his  name  is1 


h  Recte  John  Charden  of  Devonshire, 
Bp.  (1596-1601),  had  been  a  noted 
preacher.  John  Todd,  '  Doctor  of 
Divinity,  Dean  of  Cashel,  who  had 
been  a  Jesuit,  was  Bp.  (1606-1611); 
but  being  called  to  Account  for  some 
Crimes  he  had  committed,  he  resigned, 
and  a  little  after  died  in  prison  in  Lon- 
don of  Poyson,  which  he  had  prepared 
for  himself.' —  Ware. 

1  Recte  Daniel  Neylan,  Rector  of 
Iniscorthy  in  Killaloe  Diocese;  Bp. 
(1583-1603).  Pilsworth,  b.  in  London, 
was  Bp.  from  1604  to  1635.  In  1591, 
out  of  50  benefices  in  Kildare,  4  were 
vacant  and  in  the  bishop's  possession, 
22  were  usurped  by  laymen;  24  were 
enjoyed  by  22  incumbents,  of  whom 
one  'commorat  in  Anglia,'  and  12  were 
pluralists  who  held  livings  in  other 
dioceses.— See  MS.,  T.C.D.,  E.  3,  14, 
quoted  by  W.  Maziere  Brady. 

Pilsworth  '  was  determined  to  have 
a   share   in   the   spoil   by  leaving  his 


Bishoprick  poorer  than  he  found  it.' — 
Harris's  Addition  to  Ware. 

k  Recte  Hugh  Allen,  b.  in  England, 
Bp.  (1582-1599). 

'  He  made  long  Leases  of  the  Manor 
of  Fethard,  and  of  many  other  Farms, 
reserving  very  small  Rents  to  his  See. 
But  Thomas  Ram,  who  was  afterwards 
Bishop,  recovered  the  Manor,'  after  a 
long  suit,  and  by  giving  a  lease  of 
Whitechurch  to  Allen's  son  for  2 1  years. 
Bp.  Allen  also  leased  in  Fee  1500  acres 
to  Sir  H.  Wallop,  Vice-Treasurer,  and 
the  Parsonage  of  Carne  for  6 1  years  to 
N.  Kenny,  Clerk  of  the  First-Fruits, 
who  suffered  him  to  detain  money  for 
which  he  was  bound  to  account  to  the 
Exchequer,  and  which  Ram  was  forced 
to  pay. — Harris 's  Ware. 

Thomas  Ram,  born  in  Windsor,  was 
Bp.  (1605-1634). 

1  John  Horsfall,  b.  in  Yorkshire, 
Bp.  (1586-1609). 


236 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  B.  of  Leighlin,  united  to  Fernes.k 

All  these  be  under  the  Archbishop  of  Dublin. 

The  Bishop  of  Waterfordm  and  Lismore. 

The  B.  of  Corke,"  and  Clone  and  Ross  Carbery. 

The  B.  of  Ardfert,0  his  name  is  Crosbie. 

The  B.  of  Limerick,  his  name  is  Adams.p 

The  B.  of  Emelie,m  annexed  to  the  Archb.  of  Cashel. 

The  B.  of  Killallow,q  his  name  is  O'Bryan. 

All  these  be  under  the  Archbishop  of  Cashel. 


m  Vide  note  c. 

n  Wm.  Lyon  of  Chester,  Bp.  (1583- 
16 1 7),  Vicar  of  Naasin  1573.  A  prelate 
of  an  active  and  liberal  spirit.  In  the 
palace  grounds  in  Cork  was  found  a 
flagstone  with  the  inscription — '  This 
house  was  builded  in  anno  1589  by  — 
Welleam  lion,  an  Englis  man  born 
beshop  of  Cork,  Clon-an-Ross,  and  this 
tomb  was  erected  in  anno  dni.  1597,' 
etc.  His  portrait  is  in  the  see-house 
of  Cork.  He  d.  at  Cork  at  a  very  ad- 
vanced age. —  Cotton's  Fasti. 

0  Nich.  Keenan,  Bp.  (1588-1599). — 
Ware.  John  Crosby,  Bp.  (1600-162 1) 
m.  the  dau.  of  O'Lalor  of  Queen's  Co.; 
he  had  two  sons ;  his  daughters  were 
mar.  to  M'Elligott,  McGillicuddy, 
Stephenson  of  Dunmoylin  in  Limerick, 
and  Collum.  Crosby  was  ancestor  of 
the  Earls  of  Glandore. — Lodge,  vol.  iii., 

P-  327- 

p  Recte  John  Thornburgh,  of  Salis- 
bury, Bp.  ( 1 593-1 603),  performed  many 
eminent  services  to  the  Crown  after  his 
advancement  to  the  See  of  Limerick, 
which  were  the  cause  of  his  subsequent 


promotions ;  he  was  '  well  furnished 
with  Learning,  Wisdom,  Courage,  and 
other  as  well  Episcopal  as  temporal 
Accomplishments,  beseeming  a  gentle- 
man, a  Dean,  and  a  Bishop.  He  had 
great  skill  in  Chimistry,  by  which  it 
was  thought  he  attained  to  so  great  an 
Age,  arriving  at  his  89th  year.'  He  was 
translated  to  Bristol,  and  then  to  Wor- 
cester, where  there  is  a  monument  to 
him  with  a  curious  inscription,  begin- 
ning thus — '  Denarius  Philoso-phorum. 
Dum  spiro,  spero.' 

Adams  of  Middlesex  was  Bp.  (1604- 
1625.)     On  his  tomb  is  inscribed — 

'  Bernardus  jacet  hie  en  Adamus,  Episco- 
pus  olim, 

Omnia  non  vidit  Solomonis,  et  omnia  vana. 

A  Bishop  once  here  Bernard's  Bones  remain; 

He  saw  not  all,  but  saw  that  all  was  vain. 

Sufficient  God  did  give  me,  which  I  spent ; 

I  little  borrowed,  and  as  little  lent. 

I  left  them  whom  I  loved  enough  in  store — 

Increased  this  Bishoprick,  relieved  the  Poor.' 

q  Maurice  O'Brien,  b.  in  Arra,  Bp. 

(1570-1612),  received  the  profits  of  the 

See  six  years  before  his  consecration ; 

he  voluntarily  resigned  a  year  before 


THE    BISHOPS    AND    ARCHBISHOPS. 


237 


The  B.  of  Kilmacow/ 

The  B.  of  Elfin,5  his  name  is  Linch. 

The  B.  of  Athcourie,'  Vacant. 

The  B.  of  Clonfert,r  his  name  Linch. 

The  B.  of  Maio,  annexed  to  Toam. 

The  B.  of  Killallo,1  Vacat. 

These  be  under  the  Archb.  of  Toam. 

So  the  BB.  of  Ulster  and  Meath  be  under  the  Primat  of 
Armagh,  the  BB.  of  Leinster  under  the  Archb.  of  Dublin.  The 
BB.  of  Mounster  under  the  Archb.  of  Cashell.  The  BB.  of 
Conaug-ht  under  the  Archb.  of  Toam. 


his  death. —  Ware.  This  Mortogh  had 
two  sons,  Torlogh  and  John. — Memoirs 
of  the  O'Briens,  p.  547. 

r  KilmacduaghandClonfert.  Stephen 
Kerovan,  b.  in  Galway,  Bp.  (15S2- 
1602).  Roland  Linch,  b.  in  Galway, 
Bp.  (1602-1625.)  The  Members  of 
the  Royal  Visitation  say,  '(Linch),  Bp. 
of  Clonfert  and  Kilmacduach  and 
Clonfert  hath  dealt  so  fraudulently  and 
perversely  with  us,  that  we  cannot  give 
the  least  Credit  to  his  relation.  We 
have  undeniable  Evidence  that  upon 
his  first  Promotion,  Clonfert  was  es- 
teemed worth  ;£i6o  per  Ann.,  and 
Kilmacduach    .£100.     But    now    the 


Bp.  hath  returned  us  a  Roll  in  Writing, 
in  which  he  makes  the  value  of  Clon- 
fert only  ^40,  and  Kilmacduach  only 
^24,  but  gives  us  no  account  how  this 
happened.' — Harris's  Ware. 

s  John  Fitzjames  Linch,  b.  in  Gal- 
way, LL.B.  of  Oxford,  Bp.  (1584-161 1), 
educated  at  Oxford;  'by  Alienation?, 
etc.,  so  wasted  and  destroyed  it  (his 
See),  that  he  left  it  not  worth  200  Marks 
a  year.  It  is  said  he  lived  a  concealed 
anddieda  "Publick  Papist.'" — Harris's 
Ware. 

'  Achonry  and  Killala.  Owen  O'Con- 
nor, b.  in  Ireland;  Bp.  of  Killala 
( 1 591-1607.) — Ware. 


238 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


THE    HAVENS    OF    IRELAND. 


Loughfoyle." 
Oulderflecte.b 
Carrickfergus,  a  wild  road.0 
Strangford.d 
Arg-las,  barred. 
Carlingford,6  barred. 
Dundalke/  barred. 
Skerries,g  dangerous  for  many 

rockes  covered  at  ful  Sea. 
Rushe,  a  Creeke. 
Malahide. 

Havens. — 3rd  vol.  S.P.,  Henry  8, 
year  1543,  p.  446. 

a  In  O'Donnell's  countrey. 

b  A  good  haven  in  the  Irishe  Scottes 
countrey.  The  Banne  in  Maccryllie's 
country. 

c  Knockfergus,  a  good  haven  and 
yours. 

d  A  good  haven. 

e  A  good  haven. 

f  A  creek. 

E  Skyrries,  a  good  rode.  Howthe, 
Dalkey,  Wicklow.—  Dean  Nowel,  MS. 

h  Limerick,  very  good,  but  much 
hindered  by  certen  Yrishmen  bordering 
on  either  syde. 

'  Galway,  very  good. 

J  '  Inver,  commonly  called  the  broad 


Hah,g  a  road. 
The  Sheynen,h  and 

many  places  therein. 
Galloway.' 
The  lies  of  Arran  the 

outer, 
broad  HavenJ 
Inisbafin.j 
Moyne. 
Sligo. 
Calbeg. 

haven;  so  it  is  broad  within  three  hun- 
dred sayle  may  roade  here  without 
annoying  one  another.  The  fyshing  is 
good  and  plentyfull  for  Codd,  Lynge, 
Hearinge,  etc.  But  the  entry  is  such 
that  a  Poortie  with  artillery  on  the  south 
side  may  sinke  any  vessell.' — Descript. 
of  Connaught  in  16 12. 

'  Ince  Bofin,  the  land  of  Saints,  Tirke 
Mayne,  and  Clere,  are  under  the  rule 
of  O'Malley;  they  are  very  pleasant  and 
fertile,  plenty  of  woode,  arabell  grounde, 
pasture  and  fishe.  and  a  very  temperate 
ayer.' — Apothecarie  St?iitk,  anno  1561. 
See  his  MS.  published  in  Ulster  Jour, 
of  Arch.  Inish  Bonn  is  called  Inish 
Potin  in  Nowel,  and  Arran  is  called 
Arinnenewe 


THE    HAVENS    OF    IRELAND. 


239 


Lough  Sulley.1 


Youghall,p  good  at  half  Tide. 
Cork." 

Kinsale,  good  at  all  tymes. 
Rosse  Carbery. 
Baltimore/ 
Valentia. 
Dingle.5 

The  best  of  these    Havens  have  no  toune  nere  them    as 
Calbeg,  Loughsully,  0-Lderfleet,etc. 


Dalgoy,1  a  wild  road. 

Wicklo,"1  for  small  Vessels 

Arcklo,m  for  the  same. 

Passage." 

Dungarvan.0 

Rosse." 


k  Lough  Swilly.  Also  Assero,  Shepe- 
haven,  Northerborne,  in  O'Donnell's 
country. 

1  Dalkey  ? 

m  But  a  creek. 

n  Waterford  and  Rosse,  very  good. 

0  A  barred  haven. 

p  A  good  haven. 

q  a  good  haven. 

'  Wallentimore,  good  in  Ohetheris- 
calle's  country.  Beare  Haven  in  O'Suly- 
ivan's  country,  very  good. 

s  Crook  Haven  and  Dyngell  Creek, 
in  Machartie's  country.  Nowel  calls 
Dingle,  '  Dangyr  Ighois.' 

Also  '  Wexford  badde,  Drogheda 
badde,  Lambay  Ylonde  a  good  rode 
for  all   manner  of  windes.' — St.  Leger 


to    Henry    8,    6th    April    1543 — State 
Papers. 

In  addition  to  these,  Nowel' s  MS. 
has — '  Ardglasse  Loghuen,  Kilkele, 
Kilcloghir,  Holmpatrick,  Dublin,  To- 
malag,  Kierie,  Derrie,  Downemore, 
Downeshead,  Downelong,  Artlanan, 
Croghan,  Dunburie,  Ballineskelligy, 
Tralee,  Cassane,  Inniskae,  Belalem, 
Glanemagh,  Ballywhyghan,  Kinwarre, 
Dowrig,  Woran,  Roskain,  Killenkillie, 
Rathsilben,  Burske,  Belaclare,  Balala, 
Ardroute,  Ardenoch,  Ardremakow, 
Rosbare,  Kilgholm,  Kalbaly,  Rabran, 
Bierweis  our,  Burwis  Qare,  Bunveis 
nowe,  Fattra  Kattra' !!—  Nowel s  MS., 
written  before  1576.  See  a  long  de- 
scription of  the  Connaught  Havens  in 
vol.  27  of  the  Archaeologia. 


24O  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

A  NOTE  OF  THE  REVENUES  AND  CASUALTIES 

OF  IRELAND. 

The  old  Rents  and         of  the  Countie  of  the  Cittie  of 

Revenues  of  the  several 

counties  here  mencioned         Dublin 

Of  the  Countie  of  Dublin 

Kildare 

Meath     - 

Longford 

Westmeath 

Drogheda 

Roscommon 

Galloway 

Louth 

Antrym 

Cittie  of  Limerick 

Corke      - 

Dublin    - 

Kilkenny 

Westmeath 

Clare 

Louth      -  -  - 

Kings      -  -  - 

Roscomon 

Galloway 

Longford 

Sligo 

Reg         - 

Drogheda 

Downe 

Maio 

Kerry  .     - 


^218 

15 

2 

174 

9 

6 

10 

0 

0 

164 

17 

8 

37 

6 

8 

17 

15 

4 

137 

8 

9 

79 

9 

2 

5 

10 

0 

5 

0 

0 

21 

12 

1 

20 

2 

2 

10 

0 

0 

939 

18 

8 

394 

16 

6 

447 

12 

2 

12 

5 

0 

814 

16 

6 

150 

7 

3 

102 

17 

7 

209 

13 

8 

1 1 1 

1 1 

0 

16 

16 

r 

35 

2 

5 

10 

12 

4 

53 

3 

9 

76 

3 

1 

91 

17 

0 

THE  REVENUES  OF  IRELAND.  24 1 


Rents  and    Revenues   of  Cavan 

the  Q.  Lands  and  poss. 

in  Ireland  both  Spirituall  O'CarTel's    Countrie 

and  Temporall  in  the         .,... 

Sevevall  Counties  thereof.  -K.llua.re 

Catherlagh 

Limerick 

Wexford 

Tipperary 

Waterford 

Meath     - 

Corke 


£16 

16 

0 

6 

10 

4 

972 

12 

1 1 

107 

12 

5 

3ii 

10 

1 

430 

1 

0 

252 

16 

4 

305 

19 

6 

1729 

9 

0 

310 

4 

8 

Summa  totalis     -  -  -,£8236   14     7 


Rents  reserved  to  the      O'Carrel's  Countrie 

Cjuene,  for  territories  and 

Lands  resigned  to  her        Corke        -  -  -  - 

and  taken  back  from  her 

again.  Galloway 

Roscomon  ... 

King's  Countie 

Limerick  ... 

Province  of  Ulster 

Fercale  in  the  King's  Countie     - 

A  Composition  made  by  King's  Countie 
Sr  Henrie  Sidney  for  ,_.        _       ,    _ 

Bonnaught  money.  WeXIOrd  L-OUntie 

For  certen  Personages  let  to  the 
B.  of  Meath 
Severaii  Compositions     Composition  for  Mona^han 

made  by  Severaii  Dep.        _  .   .  r     i         ti    i 

with  the  Country  for       Composition  of  the  rale 

easing  them  of  the  Cesse  /-.  •.  •  r  r^  \  ,. 

of  Soldiers  and  provision  Composition  of  Conaught 
for  the  Dep  hous.  Composition  of  Mounster 

Chief  Rents  in  Mounster 
Undertakers'  Lands  per  Annum 


200 

0 

0 

12 

10 

8 

21 

1 1 

2 

6 

0 

0 

O 

10 

0 

6 

16 

0 

187 

13 

4 

53 

6 

8 

40 

0 

0 

194 

13 

4 

84 

1 

0 

761 

6 

0 

2008 

0 

0 

3864 

8 

10 

1007 

2 

8 

876 

8 

0 

5615 

0 

0 

242 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


The  Ouene's  casualties  which  is  Yearlie  uncertaine. 


Subsidies  of  Temporall  Lands 

the  xx  of  the  clergie 

The  Office  of  the 

Fines  for  Homages 

Fines  for  Liverie 

Fines  for  alienation 

Fines  for  relief 

Fines   for  Leases  for  term   of 

Years 
Fines  for  Ecclesiasticall  causes 
Fines  for  Pardones 
The  Sherriffs  Accompts 
Forfeitures  of  Recognizances 
Office  of  the  First  Fruits 


Office  of  the  Clerke  of  the 
Crowne 

Office  of  the  Clerke  of  the  Starr 
Chamber 

Office  of  the  Clerke  of  Facul- 
ties 

Office  of  the  Prerogative 
Court 

Customs  of  all  kinds  of  Mer- 
chandize brought  or  carried 
out 

Imposts  of  Wines  let  to  Sr 
Henrie  Broncard  for  ^2000 


yearlie 

Note  that  the  Irish  Pound  or  Shilling  is  lesse  by  the  4th 
part  than  the  Inglysh,  as  the  Irysh  pound  is  but  18^.  Ster.,  the 
Irish  Shilling  yd,  Ster. 

The  Summe  of  the  Ordinarie  receats  by  the  half  year,  out 
of  the  Revenues  and  Impost  is  ^24,952  45-.  Irish. 


A  Note  of  the  Yearlie  Payments  issued  out  of 

THE    REVENNUES. 


To  the  Officers  of  the  Exchequer 
To  the  Officers  of  the  King's  bench 
To  the  Officers  of  the  common  Pleas 
To  the  Officers  of  the  Chauncerie 


£1188  13  o 

543  6  8 

206  7  9 

628  14  5 


THE  REVENUES  OF  IRELAND.  243 

To  the  Officers  attending  the  L.  Dep.  and  coun- 
sail  Sitting  in  the  Starr  chamber  within  the 
Castle  of  Dublin  -  -  -  ■    ^133     6     8 

To  the  Collectors  and  Controllers  of  the  Customs 

of  Dublin  and  Drogheda  -  -  -         40     o     o 

To  the  Clerk  of  Works,  his  Fee  -  -         34  vj    viij 

The  Fees  of  divers  Constables  of  Castles  within 

Ireland  -  -  -  -  286  vj  viij 

Annuities  and  pensions  granted  either  for  Service 
or  upon  favour,  some  during  Life,  some  during 
the  parties'  good  behaviour,  or  during  the  prince's 
pleasure,  paiable  out  of  the  Revenues  and  not 
out  of  the  treasure         ... 

To  the  Officers  of  the  Countie  of  Wexford 

To  divers  Officers  attending  the  State 

Expens  .... 

The  Sume  of  all  Issues  and  Disbursments 

The  particulars  of  these  reckonings,  and  of  the  disburs- 
ment  of  the  rest  of  the  Revenues  may  appear  in  a  Book  by 
itself,  and  also  the  issuing  of  the  Treasure  that  cometh  out  of 
I ngl.  extending  everie  of  these  late  years  to  ;£  120,000  in  the 
Entertayment  of  the  L.  Dep.  or  Justices. 

The  L:  Lieutenant. 

The  L:  President  of  Mounster. 

The  Knight  Marshall. 

The  Threasurer  at  Warrs. 

All    the    Officers    of    the    Field    and    the    Sergeant 

Maior. 
Mr  of  the  Ordinance  and  his  Officers. 
Minister  Mr  Controller  and  commissaries. 


2835 

vj 

U 

67 

0 

0 

76 

0 

1 

0 

283 

9 

8 

6322 

5 

0 

244  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 

Campe,  Mrs 

Corporalls  of  the  Field. 

86  Capitens  with  their  Lieutenante,  Ensignes,  Ser- 
geants, Dromes  and  Fifes,  and 

Trompeters,  with  Eight  Thousand  Souldiers,  Horse 
and  Foote. 

Besides  for  Severall  Wards  in  the  Castles  of 

Dublin,  Knockfergus, 

Catherlaghe,  Athloane, 

Marreborrow,  Duncanon, 

Phillipstowne,  Carlinford, 

Laughlin,  Fearnes, 

Trim,  Dondrome, 

Dungarvan,  Castle     and     Abbey,    besides 

Castle  mayne,  many    Pensioners    and     1 2 

Limericke,  Alme. 

Names  of  the  Councill  of  Ireland. 

Sr  Arthure  Chicester,  L.  Dep. 

Thomas  Jones,  L.  Chancellor. 

Sr  James  Ley,  chief  Justice. 

Sr  Thomas  Butler  Knight  Earle  of  Ormond  Vi. 

Earle  of  Clanrickard,  President  of  Conaught. 

Dod  Bishop  of  Meath. 

Sr  Henrie  Davies,  L.  Davies,  L.  president  of  Mounster. 

Rich:  Wingfield  Knight  Marshall  of  Ireland. 

Thomas  Ridgwae  Knight  at  Warrs. 

Sr  Nicholas  Walshe,  Justice  of  the  common  pleas. 

Sir  Humphry  Winch,  chief  Baron  of  the  Exchequer. 

Sr  Anthony  S'  Leger,  Master  of  the  Rolles. 

Sir  Oliver  S'  John  Knight,  Mr  of  the  Ordinance. 


THE    COUNCILL    OF    IRELAND. 


245 


Sr  Henrie  Harrington. 
Sr  Edward  Brabazon. 
Sr  Oliv.  Lambert. 
Sr  Henrie  Dowcra. 
Sr  William  Godolphin. 
Sr  Francis  Stafford. 
The  Bishop  of  Downe. 


Sr  James  Fullerton. 
Sr  Rich.  Morrison. 
Sr  Henrie  Power. 
Sr  Gerrot  Moore. 
Sr  Adam  Loftus. 
Sr  Geffrey  Fenton. 
Sr  Richard  Cooke. 


246  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


APPENDIX. 


Sir  Arthur  Chichester's  Instructions  to  Sir  James  Ley 
and  Sir  John  Davys,  touching  the  Settlement  in  Ulster. 
Sept.    1608. — See  Cal.  of  Irish  S.  P.,  an.  1608,  p.  55. 

Cavan. — See  p.  117,  supra. 

The  Cavan  is  a  spacious  and  large  county,  very  populous,  and  the  people 
hardy  and  warlike.  The  Chief  of  them  are  the  O'Realyes  (O'Reillys),  of  which 
Surname  there  are  sundry  Septs,  most  of  them  cross  and  opposite  one  unto 
another.  By  the  division  and  Separation  among  themselves,  the  whole  county, 
which  heretofore  made  their  dependancy  upon  the  chief  of  the  Sept  by  the  name 
of  O'Realye,  may  with  the- more  facility  and  assurance  be  divided  into  parcels, 
and  disposed  to  several  freeholders,  who,  depending  immediately  upon  the  King, 
will  not  fear  or  obey  their  neighbours,  unless  some  one  or  two  be  made  so  power- 
ful as  to  overtop  and  sway  down  the  rest ;  and  therefore  care  must  be  in  the 
Settlement  of  this  country,  that  the  greatest  part  of  the  people  have  their  depen- 
dancy immediately  from  the  King,  and  as  little  upon  the  Irish  lords  as  may  be 
without  apparent  hindrance  to  the  plantation. 

The  natives  of  that  County  are  not  able  in  worth  nor  people  to  inhabit  and 
manure  the  half  thereof. 

The  books  of  Survey  and  other  collections  will  disclose  the  chief  pretenders 
to  the  lands  in  each  barony,  and  in  smaller  circuits,  who  may  be  provided  for  as 
shall  be  directed,  or  as  they  (the  commissioners)  shall  think  fit,  if  it  be  left  to 
their  discretion. 

The  principal  place  to  be  cared  for  is  the  town  of  Cavan,  which  wishes  to 
be  made  a  corporation,  and  a  ballibeto  of  land  (if  it  may  be)  to  be  laid  unto  it 
out  of  the  barony  of  Cavan.  The  Castle  there  is  to  be  likewise  reserved,  and 
the  like  allotment  of  land  to  be  made  for  the  maintenance  thereof. 


APPENDIX.  247 

Belturbet  is  likewise  by  situation  a  fit  place  to  be  strengthened  by  a  ward 
or  other  residence  of  civil  people. 

The  barony  of  Cavan  (except  Cloughouter)  may  be  disposed  in  demesne 
and  chiefry  to  young  Mulmorie  O'Relye,  the  grandchild  of  Sir  John  O'Relye. 
There  are  many  freeholders  in  the  barony,  as  the  Bradies,  and  M'Cabies,  and 
others,  who  will  expect  a  good  portion  ;  but  Mulmory,  the  head  of  the  house, 
must  get  land  out  of  other  baronies  or  chief  rents,  as  his  father  was  slain  in  the 
Queen's  service,  and  he  is  descended  by  the  mother  from  the  house  of  Ormonde. 

Fermanagh. — See  p.  24,  supra. 

Fermanagh  cannot  be  divided  as  the  Cavan,  by  reason  of  Connor  Roe 
Maguyre,  who  has  a  patent  of  the  whole  country  passed  unto  him  in  the  late 
Queen's  time,  but  upon  conference  and  advice  had  with  him  by  the  Deputy  and 
Council  for  the  settlement  of  his  kinsman  Cow  Connaught  (Couconaght)  Maguyre, 
and  of  that  country,  he  was  content  to  submit  himself  to  their  order  for  a  new 
division,  upon  which  three  baronies  of  the  seven  were  allotted  to  him,  the  said 
Connor  Roe,  with  a  promise  of  letters  for  the  same,  which  in  his  (Chichester's; 
opinion  were  meet  to  be  passed  to  him  with  a  clause  to  make  a  competent  number 
of  freeholders  of  the  natives  of  that  county,  and  with  reservation  of  rent  to  His 
Majesty. 

The  other  four  baronies  were  intended  to  Cow  Connaught  Maguyre,  and 
are  now  in  the  hands  of  his  brother  Bryen,  but  divers  gentlemen  inhabit  there- 
upon, who  claim  a  freehold  in  the  lands  they  possess.  It  is  to  be  considered  and 
resolved  by  the  Lords  whether  any  part  thereof  shall  be  bestowed  upon  the 
pretenders  to  the  freehold,  or  on  the  brethren  and  Sept  of  Cow  Connaught,  and, 
namely,  on  Tyrone's  grandchild,  son  to  Hugh  Maguyre,  slain  in  Munster. 
Bryen  is  a  proper  and  active  young  man,  and  has  a  younger  brother.  These 
will  be  stirring  and  keep  out  if  they  be  not  cared  for  or  restrained,  and  so  will 
the  freeholders  with  them,  and  the  child  when  he  comes  to  be  a  man.  There- 
fore, either  they  must  be  provided  for  and  settled,  or  the  new  plantation  must  be 
made  strong  and  powerful  to  keep  them  in  awe  and  subjection,  which  will 
require  great  charge  and  foresight ;  and  to  remove  them  with  their  followers  and 
tenants  to  other  countries  will  be  found  somewhat  difficult. 

Henry  and  Con  O'Neale,  sons  to  Shane  O'Neale,  are  now  seated  in  this 
county  upon  lands  which  they  took  from  Cow  Connaught  Maguyre,  to  which 
certain  freeholders  pretend  title.  If  the  King  think  them  worth  the  cherishing, 
they  must  be  seated   in  something  in  this  county  or  Armagh,  or  else  removed 


248  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

clear  out  of  Ulster;  and  if  his  Majesty  could  assume  or  purchase  a  Signory  in 
Munster,  it  were  good  sending  them  thither  ;  they  are  civil  and  discreet  men, 
especially  Harry,  and  have  each  of  them  4s.  a-day  pension  from  His  Majesty. 

In  this  county  there  is  neither  town  nor  civil  habitation.  Iniskellin  is  the 
fittest  place,  in  his  opinion,  for  the  Shire  town,  and  to  be  made  a  corporation. 

Donegal. — See  p.  29,  supra. 

This  has  been  so  bangled  by  the  Earl  of  Tyrconnell  by  sales,  mortgages, 
and  underhand  conveyances,  that  he  (Chichester)  can  make  no  certain  demon- 
stration thereof,  only  this  is  certain,  Enishowen  is  come  unto  the  King  by 
O'Dogherty's  attainders.  Glanfyne  and  the  greatest  part  of  Monganagh  was 
promised  to  Sir  Neale  O'Donnell,  whereof  he  might  have  had  letters  patent,  but 
he  neglected  to  take  them  out,  expecting  greater  quantities  and  pretending  title 
to  the  whole  country,  which  he  (Chichester)  thinks  will  hardly  satisfy  his 
ambition  ;  but  his  case  is  such  at  this  time  that  he  will  seem  satisfied  with  a 
small  portion,  so  he  be  assured  of  his  life  and  liberty.  Can  say  nothing  of  him 
until  the  pleasure  of  the  King  or  the  Lords  of  the  Council  be  signified  touching 
his  arraingment  or  enlargement.  His  son  is  a  dangerous  youth,  of  whom,  and 
of  Caffer  Oge  O'Donnell,  he  (Chichester)  has  declared  his  opinion  to  them, 
together  with  the  briefs  and  sundry  examinations  and  voluntary  confessions  made 
against  them. 

Divers  gentlemen  claim  freeholds  in  that  county,  as  namely,  the  three  Septs 
of  the  McS\vynes,  Bane  (Banagh),  Fanaght,  and  Doe,  O'Boyle,  and  O'Galchare 
(O'Gallagher) ;  but  these  men  passed  over  their  rights  (if  any  they  had)  to  the 
Earl  (as  it  is  said)  which  he  got  from  them  cautiously  and  by  unworthy  duties  ; 
in  whose  behalf  his  Majesty  is  to  signify  his  gracious  pleasure,  and  he  (Chichester) 
is  sure  every  of  them  has  more  land  than  they  and  their  Septs  will  be  able  to 
manure  and  plant  in  any  civil  and  good  fashion  these  40  years,  albeit  peace 
did  continue  among  them ;  and  they  are  for  the  most  part  unworthy  of  what  they 
possess,  being  a  people  inclined  to  blood  and  trouble,  but  to  displant  them  is 
very  difficult.  If  His  Majesty  dispose  the  land  to  strangers,  they  must  be  very 
powerful  to  suppress  them.  Suggests  that  if  his  pleasure  be  to  continue  them  in 
what  they  claim,  the  lands  may  be  divided  into  many  parts  and  disposed  to 
several  men  of  the  septs,  and  some  to  strangers  or  some  others  of  this  nation, 
leaving  none  greater  than  another,  unless  it  be  in  a  small  difference  to  the  now 
chiefs  of  the  name.  If  this  cours  displease  the  said  chiefs,  it  will  content  many  others, 
who  will  be  good  ties  upon  them  if  by  Justice  they  be  supported  accordingly. 


APPENDIX.  249 

There  are  divers  other  places  within  this  county  fit  to  be  reserved  for  the 
King's  Service  and  to  bestow  upon  civil  and  well  chosen  men,  some  of  which 
are  already  possessed  by  Wards  and  garrisons,  as  namely,  the  Deny,  Lyffor, 
Ballishanon,  Dunegall,  Castle  Doe,  and  Culmore.  .  .  . 

Coleraine. — See  p.  28,  supra. 

This  county  is  of  small  circuit,  containing  only  three  baronies,  two  of  which 
are  not  so  large  as  the  barony  of  Dungannon.  It  has  been  of  long  time 
attempted  for  parcel  of  Tyrone.  The  chief  septs  that  inhabit  it  are  the  O'Cahanes, 
and  under  them  the  O'Mullanes,  Magilliganes,  and  M'Closkies.  The  Earl  of 
Tyrone  made  challenge  unto  this  country,  as  passed  unto  him  by  letters  patents, 
and  required  Sir  Donell  O'Cahane,  the  now  chief  of  that  name,  to  give  him  ,£200 
a  year,  in  consideration  of  his  challenge,  but  being  unable  to  make  him  payment 
of  so  much,  in  respect  of  the  waste  and  riotous  expenses  otherwise,  he  yielded 
one  of  the  baronies  up  to  the  Earl  in  lieu  of  the  ,£200,  which  the  Earl  possessed 
at  the  time  of  his  flight ;  and  albeit  it  is  thought  that  neither  Tyrone  nor 
O'Cahane  had  any  good  and  lawful  estate  in  that  country  (the  right  being  in  the 
King  by  the  Statute  1 1  Elizabeth),  yet  it  is  his  duty  to  declare  that  the  whole 
country  (the  castle  of  Annogh  with  a  good  quantity  of  lands  thereunto  annexed, 
and  the  Bishop's  and  Church's  rights  excepted)  was  promised  to  the  said  Sir 
Donell  O'Cahane  upon  his  submission  in  the  year  1601,  by  the  Lord  Mountjoy, 
then  Lord  Deputy ;  and  in  confirmation  hereof  a  custodiam  was  passed  to  him 
under  the  Great  Seal.     He  is  now  prisoner  in  the  Castle  of  Dublin. 

In  this  county  they  neither  hold  ward  nor  keep  men  upon  the  King's 
charges.  If  Sir  Donell  O'Cahane  be  found  unworthy  of  the  King's  favour  by 
reason  of  his  treasonable  practices  and  misdemeanours,  then  is  that  country  in 
the  King's  hands.  The  principal  places  to  be  cared  for  within  this  county  are 
the  Castles  of  Annogh,  Lemavadie,  Colerayne,  and  Downgeuyne  (Dungiven), 
albeit  most  of  them  are  ruinous  and  out  of  repair.  If  Sir  Donnell  O'Cahane  be 
enlarged,  or  if,  upon  his  trial,  he  escape  the  danger  of  the  law,  two  parts  of  that 
country  will  not  content  him,  nor,  he  thinks,  the  whole ;  but  whatsoever  becomes 
of  him,  good  consideration  must  be  had  of  his  brother,  Manus  O'Cahane,  Manus 
ut  Quyvally  O'Cahane,  and  some  few  others  whom  he  (Chichester)  has  found 
honest  in  those  last  troubles,  and  before.  .  .  . 

Tyrone. — See  p.  25,  supra. 
The  great  sept  of  this  county  is  come  to  the  King  by  the  attainders  of  the 
Earl  of  Tyrone  and  his  Sept.      In  this  county  they  hold  the  forts  of  Mountjoy, 


25O  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Omey,  and  the  ruinous  castle  of  Dungannon  by  the  King's  garrisons  and  wards  ; 
upon  the  division  and  settlement  of  the  county,  other  places  must  be  found  out 
and  strengthened  for  a  time,  as,  namely,  about  the  Clogher,  where  lies  the 
country  of  Sir  Cormac  O'Neale,  another  in  the  Glynnes  of  Glancomkeyne,  the 
Slute  Artes  (Slught  Airta)  country,  and  two  or  three  other  places.   .  .  . 

The  chief  Septs  of  this  country  are  the  O'Neales,  and  under  them  the 
O'Donnoles,  O'Hagganes,  O'Quynes,  O'Delvynes  (O'Devlins),  O'Corres,  the 
Clondonells,  the  Melans,  and  other  septs,  which  are  warlike  people  and  many 
in  number,  and  must  be  provided  for  or  overmastered,  without  which  they  will 
not  be  ruled  nor  removed. 

Has  delivered  the  possession  of  the  Newtown,  with  some  three  ballibetoes 
of  land,  to  Tyrlowe  and  Neale  M'Arte,  the  children  of  Sir  Arte  O'Neal,  in  respect 
of  the  good  service  they  did  against  the  traitor  O'Doghertie  and  the  relief  they 
gave  the  Lyffer  upon  the  burning  of  the  Derry.  .  .  .  Thinks  this  sufficient 
for  them,  but  they  do  not.  If  the  King  will  be  pleased  to  reserve  the  town  of 
Straban,  which  stands  within  the  lands  now  assigned  to  them,  and  give  them  a 
greater  scope  on  the  other  side,  he  thinks  it  best  for  his  Service,  ■  for  divers 
Scottislimen  will  plant  there  and  make  it  a  pretty  town,  albeit  it  was  all  burnt 
to  the  ground  by  O'Doghertie.  .  .  . 

Downeganon  (Dungannon)  to  be  made  a  corporation. 

Armagh. — See  p.  19,  supra. 
The  state  of  this  county  is  much  like  that  of  Tyrone,  and  possessed  by  the 
same  Septs,  especially  for  as  much  of  it  as  appertained  to  the  Earl  of  Tyrone, 
which  is  the  greatest  part  of  the  country.  The  rest  belongs  to  the  Lord 
Primate,  and  either  is  passed  to  Sir  Tyrlogh  and  Henry  O'Neale,  and  Sir  Henry 
Oge  O'Neale,  lately  slain  in  the  service  against  O'Dohertie,  or  is  Sir  Oghy 
O'Hanlon's,  who  lately  surrendered  his  interest  to  the  King  upon  promise  to 
have  it  repassed  to  him  ;  which  would  have  been  performed  before  this  time,  if 
he  had  sought  it,  and  would  have  permitted  certain  freeholders  to  take  letters 
patent,  and  to  hold  immediately  of  the  King  as  he  promised.  He  is  an  old, 
lame  man,  of  weake  judgement,  married  to  a  sister  of  Tyrone's,  who  is  as  malicious 
and  ill-affected  to  the  King's  government  and  country's  reformation  as  her 
brother.  She  rules  the  old  man.  His  only  legitimate  son  was  in  rebellion  with 
O'Doghertie,  and  is  now  hid  and  relieved  by  his  friends  in  that  country.  The 
old  man  must  be  provided  for  as  long  as  he  lives.  Hopes  that  after  his  death 
there  may  be  no  more  O'Hanlons — he  means  as  lord  over  the  rest,  but  that  that 
country  may  be  disposed  to  the  best  affected  of  the  sept  and  to  other  civil  men. 


APPENDIX.  25I 

The  chief  of  this  country  under  the  Earl  of  Tyrone  was  his  base  brother, 
known  by  the  name  of  Arte  M'Barron,  who  is  yet  living,  and  claims  the  greatest 
part  of  the  country  of  O'Neale,  of  which  he  is  possessed.  He  has  three  sons  with 
the  Archduke,  of  whom  two  are  captains.  These  youths,  the  sons  of  the  Earl, 
and  the  children  of  Sir  Cormock  M'Barron,  Sir  Tyrlowe  M'Henry,  and  Sir 
Henry  Oge  O'Neale,  will  kindle  a  new  fire  in  those  parts  at  some  time  or  other, 
if  they  be  not  well  looked  to  or  provided  for  in  some  reasonable  measure. 

They  are  to  declare  to  the  Lords  that  there  is  a  son  of  the  Earl  of  Tyrone, 
of  some  seven  or  eight  years  old,  and  another  to  Caffer  O'Donnell,  brother  to 
the  Earl  of  Tyrconnell.  Has  committed  them  to  the  charge  of  two  of  the 
captains  in  Ulster.  Should  gladly  receive  directions  to  dispose  of  them,  and  in 
his  opinion,  the  best  course  will  be  to  send  them  to  some  remote  parts  of 
England  or  Scotland,  to  be  kept  from  the  knowledge  of  friends  or  acquaintance. 

The  countries  known  by  the  name  of  M'Cann  Country  and  Braslowe 
(Bresilagh)  are  within  this  county,  which  are  possessed  principally  by  gentlemen, 
who  claim  the  freehold  thereof.  They  would  gladly  be  tenants  or  freeholders  to 
the  King,  and  would  pay  a  good  rent  to  His  Majesty. 

Sir  Tirlagh  McHenry  wants  to  enlarge  his  possession  of  land  of  the  Fues  ; 
it  would  be  well  to  give  him  part  of  Toghrighie,  if  that  will  make  him  and  his 
sons  honest.  Care  to  be  had  of  Henry  Oge  O'Neile's  children,  of  Con  McTyrlowe 
and  his  brethren,  who  without  such  care  are  like  to  break  out ;  and  of  Owine 
More  O'Neale,  more  for  his  honest  simplicity  than  for  any  harm  he  is  like  to  do. 
The  O'Hagans,  O'Quinns,  and  Clandonnells  were  never  better  than  tenants  and 
followers  of  the  Earl  of  Tyrone. 

Many,  of  the  natives  in  each  county  claim  freehold  in  the  land  they  possess; 
and  albeit  their  demands  are  not  justifiable  by  law,  yet  it  is  hard  and  almost 
impossible  to  displant  them. 

The  people  must  be  drawn  from  '  creatinge,'  and  settle  in  towns  and 
villages,  and  build  houses  like  those  of  the  Pale,  and  not  cabins  after  their 
wonted  manner. — The  L.  Deputy  Chichester,  Cat.  I.  S.  Papers,  1608,  p.  55. 

Sir  R.Jacob  (Sol.  Gen.)  to  Salisbury,  April  1609: — '  The  only  thing  that 
keeps  them  (the  Ulster  men)  in  subjection  is  the  want  of  arms,  for  all  their 
weapons  are  brought  into  the  King's  store.  But  they  want  no  men,  notwith- 
standing the  late  wars,  the  famine  and  the  great  plague  that  was  amongst  them ; 
for  there  are  5000  booked  in  Tyrone  and  Coleraine  ;  4000  in  Armagh  ;  6000  in 
Tirconnell;  and  in  other  counties  3000  ;  in  others,  4000 — so  that  in  all  that  pro- 
vince there  are  at  the  least  20,000  men  of  the  sword.' — Cal.  of  I.  S.  P.,  p.  197. 


252  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Kildare. — See  supra,  p.  46. 

THE  NAMES  OK  THE  LORDS,  KNIGHTS,  COMMONS,  AND  OTHER  OFFICERS  IN  THE 
COUNTY  OF  KILDARE  ON  THE  28TH  OF  JUNE  1608. 

Names  of  the  Lords  Spiritual  and  Temporal. — Gerald  Earl  of  Kildare;  William 
Bishop  of  Deny. 

Names  of  the  Knights  and  Justices  of  the  Peace. — R.  Wingfield,  G.  Cowly, 
W.  Sarsfield,  G.  Aylmer,  R.  Greame,  G.  Grearne,  J.  FitzPiers  FitzGerald,  E. 
Blany,  R.  Digby,  Knights ;  Allen  of  St.  Wolstons,  Sutton  of  Tipperaiy,  Sarsfield 
of  Surnings,  Sarsfield  of  Tully,  Nangle  .of  Ballysax,  Dallway  of  Castleton  Kil- 
drought,  Lye  of  Rathbryde,  Bartholomew  Long  of  Dyrr,  Meyres  of  Tullaghgrory, 
Rider  (Archdeacon  of  Meath),  Allen  of  Kilheele,  Eustace  of  Castle  Martin, 
Bellinge,  Aylmer,  FitzGerald  of  Laccagh,  FitzGerald  of  Allen,  Wogan  of  Rath- 
coffy,  Downton,  and  Stokes,  Esquires. 

Names  of  the  Coroners. — FitzGerrald  of  Osberstown,  FitzGerrald  of  Blackball. 

ATames  of  the  Sovereigns  and  Prozvsfs  of  the  Towns. — Sheale,  Sovereign  of  the 
town  of  Kildare ;  Aysh,  Provost  of  the  town  of  Naas ;  Smith,  Provost  of  the  town 
of  Athye ;  Atwell  Batwell,  Provost  of  the  town  of  Kildrought ;  Turlagh  Doyne, 
Provost  of  the  town  of  Rathmore ;  Peppard,  Provost  of  the  town  of  Leixlip ; 
Dowlin,  Provost  of  the  town  of  Kill ;  Browne,  Provost  of  the  town  of  Woghterard. 

Names  of  Constables. — Gilbert  Sutton  of  Ardre,  Allen  of  Bishoppscourt,  Higgs 
of  Cottlandstown,  Sherlocke  of  Sherlockstowne,  Eustace  of  Blackwood,  Bath  of 
Clane,  Bellowe  of  Clougeswood,  Eustace  of  Kylmorry,  Dod  of  Connall,  Myssett 
of  Harberston,  Gerrald  FitzBryan  of  Ballysymon,  Jacob  of  Srowlane,  Segerson  of 
Halveston,  Danyell  of  Castle  Dermott,  Dowdall  of  Killen,  Piers  Brymingham 
of  Garisker. 

Names  of  the  Jurors  for  the  Lord  King. — Barony  of  Sault. — Fyan  of  Leixlip, 
Gerrald  Wellesley  of  Kildrought,  Patrick  Tipp  of  Tippston,  Walsh  of  Moretown, 
Ayshe  of  Furnaghts. 

Barony  of  Naas. — Eustace  of  Mullaghrash,  Patrick  Sanders  of  Newton 
o'More,  Hasquin  of  Little  Rath,  Browne  of  Newton  o'More,  Sherlock  of  Naas, 
Kenna  of  the  same,  Latten  of  the  same,  Kelly  of  the  same,  and  Walter  Archbold 
of  the  same. 

Barony  of  Clane. — FitzGerrald  of  Grages,  Rochford  of  Newton  o'Clane, 
FitzGerald  of  Ballandsox,  FitzGerrald  of  Tymoghe,  Wogan  of  Downings,  Roch- 
ford of  Clane. 

Barony  of  Ikethy  and  Woghtcrcay. — Eustace  of  Clongoswood,  Aylmer  of 
Little  Cappoth,  Walsh  of  Cloncurry,  Roe  of  Brangastowne. 


APPENDIX.  253 

Baiony  of  Connally.—Wogan  of  Newhall,  Goulding  of  Haubertston,  Fitz- 
Gerrald  of  Pinchers  Grange,  Eustace  of  Siggenston. 

Barony  of  Ophaly. — FitzGerrald  of  Brownestowne. 

Barony  of  Norragh  and  Rcbon. — Walter  Wellesley  of  Norragh,  Wellesley  of 
Blackehall,  Eustace  of  Blackrath,  Eustace  of  Crookestovvne,  Eustace  of  Collbins- 
towne. 

Barony  of  Kilkullin. — Dougan  of  Tuberngan. 

Barony  of  Killta  and  Moonc. — FitzEdmond  of  Birton,  Gerald  FitzBrian  of 
the  same,  Eustace  of  Moone,  FitzGerrald  of  Bealan. 

Barony  of  Carbry. —  Brymingham  of  Donfort,  Brymingham  of  Mucklane, 
Brymingham  of  Garisker,  Brymingham  of  Grange,  Brymingham  of  Longwood, 
Brymingham  of  Russellswood. 

Carlow. — See  supra,  p.  52. 

THE  COUNTY  OF  CATHERLOGH,  THE  4TH  JUNE  1608. 

Lords. — Theobald  Lord  Viscount  Butler  of  Tullagh ;  Thomas  Lord  Bishop  of 
Laughlyn  and  Fearnes. 

Knights. — Colclough,  Maisterson,  and  Hartpoole. 

Esquires. — Morgan  McBrian,  Davells,  Wale,  Bagnall,  Eustace,  Gerald 
McMortagh,  Donell  Kavanagh,  Harman,  Hartpoole,  Bryan  MTJonnogh. 

Coroners. — Broune  of  Cloughchricke,  Tomyne  of  Clonygagh. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Catherlogh. — William  Gorst  of  Carrickstowne. 

Barony  of  Idron. — Donell  O'Rian  of  Tomgarrough,  Owen  Byrne  of  Ballyrian. 

Barony  of  St.  Molyn. — Morris  Kavanagh  of  Ballybracke,  Donnough  O'Neyle 
of  Kiltarry. 

Barony  of  Fort. — Rowry  O'Nolan  of  Kilbracan,  O'Nolan  of  Ballymoge. 

Bailiffs  Arrant. — Hugh  Leaugh  for  the  Barony  of  Catherlogh,  D.  Barron  for 
the  Barony  of  Idrone,  W.  Moyhill  for  the  Barony  of  Fort,  James  McTeig  Ser- 
geant of  Raville  ;  Edmond  Ower  Sergeant,  Sergeant  of  St.  Moylyne. 

Freeholders. — Barony  of  Idrone. — George  Etherunton  of  Rahellin,  Birne  of 
Aha,  Cahir  MTeig  of  Knockscurr,  Bime  of  Oldtowne,  Walshe  of  Tomand,  Der- 
monde  Kavanaugh  of  Rahedin,  McGerrald  of  the  Rath,  Turlough  Birne  of 
Kilm'lapock  (sic),  Edmond  MTirlough  of  Kilree,  Cahir  McDonell  Reough  of 
Ballycromgan,  Donell  Roe  McDermott  of  Baldinge,  Teig  O'Rian  of  Balliellen, 
Donough  Kavanaugh  of  Kilconyney,  Dermott  Kavanaugh  of  Ballifenyne,  David 
McMortagh  of  Clowater,  Phoores  (sic)  McCavell  of  Kilgreany,  Donough 
McGarrott   of  Bordduffe,   Garrat  McMorris   of  Kilgreaney,   James  McRichard 


254  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Ballough  of  the  Bunes,  Donough  McMorrough  of  Bally  William  Roe,  Fagon  of 
Dunlockney,  Birne  of  Seskinrem,  McGarratt  of  Balliteige,  Geere  of  Kilamonine, 
Carron  of  Rathduffe,  McDonnough  of  Knockroe,  Mortagh  Kavanaugh  of  Kil- 
kallatin,  Thomyne  of  Ballydarmyne,  Donell  Fyn  of  Boreduffe,  Walter  Butler  of 
Balliteigbeaugh,  Patrick  Morphue  of  Bollintollin. 

Barony  of  Catherlogh. — Wale  of  Pollardstowne,  Cooke  of  Staplestowne,  Fer- 
donough  Gormagan  of  Gruangfort,  Birne  of  Ballilowe,  Dermott  McShane  of 
Balliterney,  Birne  of  Ratroge,  Birne  of  Moyhill,  Birne  of  Teurelan,  Arspoll  of 
Freerstowne,  Everson  of  Clough. 

Barony  of  Fort. — Barry  of  Rarusb,  Morrough  Birne  of  Straugh,  Teige  Nolan 
of  Ballicallie,  Donogh  Nolan  of  Ballihemoge,  Mortagh  McGarrott  of  Myssell, 
Donell  McHugh  of  Shangarry,  Donell  Nolan  of  Kilayne,  Donnough  Morrough 
of  Carricknestayne,  Patrick  McShane  of  Ballitample,  Donnough  Roe  of  Kilbreede, 
Cooke  of  Kilcoole. 

Barony  of  Ravill. — Butler  of  Clomore,  Leyn  of  Shroughbooe,  Leyn  of 
Lesenevae,  Grace  of  Browalstowne,  Mortagh  Birne  of  Bennecerry,  Birne  of  Balli- 
duffe,  Dermott  Owen  of  Killelongart,  Teige  O'Gormagan  of  Ardriston,  David 
McSimon  of  Culliebege. 

Barony  of  St.  Moylyne. — Shane  McDermott  of  Ballihemoge,  McSheron  of 
Ballybege,  McDermod  of  Lefallygan,  Edmond  Collatan  of  Ballicranigambege, 
Piers  Collatan  of  Tennecarricke,  Dermond  McDonell  of  Ballycramgain  castlayn. 

Kilkenny. — See  supra,  p.  67. 

THE  COUNTY  OF  KILKENNY,  9TH  JULY  1608. 

Names  of  the  Lords  as  well  Spiritual  as  Temporal. — Thomas  Earl  of  Ormond 
and  Ossory,  Richard  Lord  Viscount  Mount  Garrett,  Theobald  Lord  Viscount 
Tullagh  ;  John  Bishop  of  Ossory. 

Names  of  Knights  and  Justices  of  the  Peace. — Sovereigns  for  the  Town  of 
*  Kilkenny. — Richard  Shee,    Knt.  ;  Jacob    Butler,  Esq. ;  Richard  Butler,    Knt.  ; 

Robert  Roth,  Esq.  ;  Mannering,  Esq. ;  Richard  Deane,  Deacon  of  Kilkenny ; 
Helias  Shee,  Esq.  ;  Gerald  Grace,  Patrick  Archer,  Walter  Walsh,  Nicholas 
Cleere,  Thomas  Denn,  Robert  Grace,  David  Serment,  Piers  Butler,  Walter 
Archer,  Henry  Shee,  John  Butler  Rector  of  Callan,  Thomas  Stronge,  Esquires. 

Names  of  the  Coroners. — FitzGerrald  of  Gurtin,  Waton  of  Growe,  Shortall  of 
Ratharding,  Walsh  of  Kilkregan. 

Names  of  the  Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Gawran. — Redmond  Bleachfield  of 
Rathgarvan,  Purcell  of  Cloghla. 


J 


APPENDIX.  255 

Constables  of  the  Baronies  of  /groin,  Ida,  and  Iberton. — FitzGerrald  of  Gurtin, 
Aylward  of  Aylwardstown. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Iverke. — Walsh  of  Kilkregan,  Daton  of  Kil- 
modally. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Kclls. — Walsh  of  Doumogan,  Howlinge  of  Kilry. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Claragh. — John  de  Rochford  of  Kilary,  George 
St.  Leger  of  Woncestowne. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Knocktofer. — Power  of  Knocktofer,  Faing  of 
Croambeg. 

Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Shillckyr. — St.  Leger  of  Tulleghabroeg,  Fitz- 
Gerrold  of  Barntchurch  ;  Archdecon,  constable  of  Galmoy. 

Constables  of  Fasagh  de  Myn  and  Odoghe. — Robnett  Purcell  of  Foulksrath, 
William  O'Brena  of  Ballyhomyn. 

Barony  of  Gawran. — Blanchfield  of  Blanchveldstoune,  Purcell  of  Ballyfoell, 
Butler  of  Old  Aboy,  Butler  of  Nogha,  Tobyn  of  Lyrath,  St.  Leger  of  Clogha, 
Blanchveld  of  Milton,  O'Ryan  of  Ullard,  Power  of  Powerswood,  Fanninge  of 
Bally  McCloghny,  Tirlagh  O'Rian  of  Barne  Vedan,  Piers  McHenry  Roe  O'Rian 
of  Thomnebaghy,  O'Rian  of  Ballymorough,  Milerus  Payen  of  Ballynebally, 
Shortall  of  Leghrath,  Shortall  of  Brownesborne. 

Igroin,  Ida,  and  Ibercon. — Gall  of  Gallstowne,  Butler  of  Anaghes,  Freny  of 
Ballyraddy,  Forstall  of  Forstalltowne,  Daton  of  the  same,  Fortstall  of  Killred, 
Walsh  of  Ballycre,  Forstall  of  Carrignegany,  Walsh  of  Carrignory,  Grace  of 
Kilrmdony. 

Barony  of  Overke. — Grant  of  Corlod,  Grant  of  Portneholl,  Daton  of  Gran- 
gowin,  Daton  of  Bally  M'Crony,  Walsh  of  Listroley. 

Barony  of  Kerlis. — Butler  of  Rossnarowe,  Butler  of  Rogerstowne,  Howling 
of  Damynbeg,  Tobyn  of  Killollegha,  Tobyn  of  Rosscommon. 

Barony  of  Shillecher. — FitzGerrald  of  Barntchurch,  Comerford  of  Ballybir, 
Forstall  of  Kilferagh,  Comerford  of  Earlstowne,  Mothell  of  the  same,  Raged  of 
Waleslogh. 

Barony  of  K7iocktofer. — Walsh  of  Corbally,  Purcell  of  Kilkerell,  Walsh  of 
Ballaghbregan,  Walshe  of  Knockmoella,  Walshe  of  Ballynerowly,  Grace  of 
Aghviller. 

Barony  of  Cranagh. — Shortall  of  Ballylorka,  Drylin  of  Kilberagha,  O'Roerk 
of  Boresheis,  Shortall  of  Purcellstiers,  Grace  of  Cowle  Ishell,  Smith  of  Clastnoe, 
Butler  of  Woucestowne. 

Barony  of  Fasagh,  Denny,   and  Idogh. — O'Brena  of  Rathcally,   Purcell  of 


256  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Esker,  Purcell  of  Lysmayne,  O'Brena  of  Uskertye,  Farr  McDonnogh  of  Crogh- 
toncle,  Duffe  of  Crint. 

Wexford. — See  supra,  p.  57. 

THE  GRAND  PANELL  OF  THE  COUNTY  OF  WEXFORD,  25TH  JULY  160S. 

Justices  of  the  Peace. — Thomas  Lord  Bishop  of  Fearnes  and  Leighline,  Sir  T. 
Colcloigh,  Sir  Dudly  Loftus,  Sir  R  Mastersonne,  Sir  L.  Esmond,  Sir  W.  Sinor, 
Knights;  Butler  of  Bellabow,  Esq. ;  Devroux  of  Ballinagir,  Morgan  Kavanagh, 
Nicholas  Kennay,  Escheator ;  Donull  Kavannagh,  Brown  of  Malranckan,  Esq.  ; 
Arthur  Kavannaigh,  Esq. ;  Murcus  FitzHarvie,  FitzHarvie,  Dermott  Kavannaigh, 
John  Broune,  Sovereign  of  Wex ;  Duffe  of  Cosse,  Dode,  Furlonge,  Witty  of 
Balleteg,  Itchinghane,  Dormer,  Dale,  Mastersonne,  Furlonge,  Alene,  Devroux  of 
Dipper,  W.  Talbot,  R.  Talbot,  Esquires. 

His  Majesty's  Cormiers. — Hammond  Stafford  of  Balleconnor,  Rowsetor  of 
Brigbargye,  Hugh  Ballaigh  ALDonaigh  Oge  of  Killconky,  Roche  of  Btianstoun, 
Sinot  of  the  Rahen. 

The  Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Forte. — Wadinge  of  Balleroghy,  Elyot  of 
Rathshillane. 

Constables  of  Baigre. — Witty  of  Nimestoune,  Devroux  of  Newcastle. 

Barony  of  Shilbirne. — Redmond  of  the  Hall,  FitzHarvie  of  Witchurch. 

Barony  of  Bantry. — Hoar  of  Bellaborow,  Sutone  and  Scurlok. 

The  Portreves  of  Towns. — Furlonge,  Portrief  of  Banno  ;  Morgan  McRory, 
Portreve  of  Taman  ;  Ketinge,  Portreve  of  Federt ;  Hea,  Portreve  of  Clomem. 

The  Gentlemen  of  Fotherde. — Chevers  of  Killiane,  gent. ;  R.  Esmond  of 
Johnstone,  Rochford  of  Tagomane,  Manton  Synot  of  Ballebrennan,  Robert 
Synot  of  Balehorron,  Cod  of  Castletowne,  Codd  of  Baleenfane,  Codd  of  Cloess, 
John  Stafford  of  Fursetime,  Walshe  of  Polranctan,  Hane  of  the  Hill,  Hane  of 
Sladde,  Walshe  of  the  Buss,  Turner  of  Belleushen,  Synott  of  Ballegerce,  Synot 
of  Rathdownny,  Devroux  of  Maglas,  Witty  of  Balmacussen,  Butler  of  Butlers- 
towne,  Ketinge  of  Balemakeyan,  Sigen  of  Sigenstoune,  Hare  of  Redestoune, 
Frinss  of  Balletorie,  Symotte  of  the  Growgane,  Hare  of  Harestoune,  Esmond  of 
Rathlonnane,  FitzNicholl  of  Balecowanne,  Rochford  of  Petettestoune,  Hoar  of 
Ionoclestoune,  Ketinge  of  Balebeg,  Wadinge  of  Asoalye,  Synot  of  Gracekyrock, 
Derraigh  O'Drycane  of  Remotestoune,  White  of  Crommer,  Synot  of  Ballohell, 
Synot  of  the  Berlagh,  Codd  of  Balmakeyrie,  Stafford  of  the  Gragene,  Gentlemen. 

The  Gentlemen  of  the  Barony  of  Bargie. — FitzHarvie  of  Kilkevan,  FitzNicholl 
of  Balehartie,  Ketinge  of  Baldenestoune,   Hammond  Chevers  of  Balesestene, 


APPENDIX.  257 

Rowsetor  of  Tomger,  Ketinge  of  Rosselletoune,  Nevell  of  Tallokenaye,  Barrie  of 
Barriestoune,  DevToux  of  the  Woodgrage,  Devrox  of  Caregeschurche,  Broune  of 
Holdhall,  Broune  of  Rathronarie,  Broune  of  Gragrobben,  Tibald  Roche  of  Kill- 
mannane,  Wittie  of  Gentestoune,  Prendergast  of  Sanshill,  Hare  of  the  Blackhall, 
Devroux  of  Coskayll. 

The  Gentlemen  of  the  Barony  of  Shilmalyce. — Synnot  of  Fawlestoune,  Synnot 
of  Rosgarlande,  Hoar  of  Ballesweillan,  Rowsetor  of  Slevey,  Hare  of  Cronwall, 
Hoar  of  the  Poill,  Meyler  of  the  Dirr,  Hoar  of  Muchwodd,  Furlonge  of  Carg- 
mannan,  Furlonge  of  the  Blackhall. 

Barony  of  Bantrye. — Butler  of  Clonkeraigh,  Furlonge  of  Daviestoun,  Scurloh 
of  the  Balgan,  Severaigh  O'Doyrane  of  the  Chaple,  Dowloun  McMoigh  of 
Ballegobbane,  Dermot  Ower  M'Moigh  of  the  same,  Edmond  McArte  of  Bole- 
bann,  Arte  McBren  of  Tample  Wodekann,  Teg  McMorrishe  Ley  of  Killovany, 
Caier  McEdmond  of  Rathepodenboy. 

The  Barony  of  Shilbime. — Ketinge  of  Dungavestown,  Luffane  of  the  Sladd, 
Witye  of  Dongalpe,  Sutone  of  the  Prisugard,  Prendergast  of  Balleforanch,  Sutone 
of  the  Old  Courte,  Sutone  of  Balesope,  Gent. ;  Ketinge  of  Galleystone. 

The  High  Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Ballaighene. — Synot  Fitzjames  of 
Ballevelle,  Connell  McDonnell  Evallo  of  .  .  . 

The  Gentlemen  of  the  same  Barony. — Synot  of  the  Owlorte,  Donnill  McArte 
of  Tobberlomunaugh,  Phelan  McMahon  of  Balleshemes,  Teg  McMawen  of 
Balerowane,  Owen  McArte  of  Tintubber,  Synott  of  Babberdargh,  Morishe  Lacy 
of  Tomlaine,  Teg  McMiertargh  of  Lougherbege,  James  M'Brann  of  Balevek, 
Synott  of  Ballensar,  Synot  of  Cowledoynge,  Donull  Dayrane  of  Killensu,  Lisurgh 
M'Teg  of  Cloane,  Cair  M'Moriertaigh  of  the  same,  Cormack  McDonnell  of 
Olortleighe,  Edmond  McArte  of  Balemute,  O'Doyrane  of  the  Dirr,  Fardairaigh 
McDermott  of  Ballena,  Sawle  O'Doyrane  of  Tentober,  Mortaigh  O'Doiran  of 
Clondae,  Shane  O'Doyrane  of  the  same,  Caier  O'Doyrane  of  Blemony,  Synot  of 
Garrevadden,  Dermott  O'Doyran  of  the  Davanargh,  Donull  O'Doyran  of  the 
same,  Donull  McDonnaigh  Tusker  of  Dondrom,  Oyn  M'Enn  of  Rahendarg, 
Gerald  MTnnes  of  the  same,  Edmond  Reaigh  of  Claranclariss,  Dermott  Reaigh 
of  Ballemony  Terrelaigh  McOyn  of  the  Courte,  Synot  of  Balemoigh,  Eff  McPhe- 
lim  Art  of  Kilmannaigh,  Oron  McBran  of  Ballegresaigh,  Shane  O'Doyrane  of 
Rainduf,  Moraigh  McAdin  of  Baletrasine,  Eff  McUrt  Bry  of  Monclough,  Teg 
Reagh  of  the  same,  Moraigh  Reagh  of  Cloanatty,  William  McTeg  of  Ballegowan, 
Phelim  McDonull  of  Garreden,  Donnaigh  McMoriertargh  of  Balegore,  Gerald 
M'Moraigh  of  Balevolo,  Terrelaigh  McMoriertagh  of  the  same,  Synot  of  Bale- 


258  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

more,  Moriertaigh  Duf  M'Moraigh  of  Balera,  Cair  McDonaigh  of  Banickard, 
Caier  McRosse  of  Ballenellok,  Phelim  McYnnes  of  Ballevodick,  Brenn  M'Ynnes 
of  the  same,  Synot  of  Balenosky,  Geer  of  Garrenusky,  Griffin  McMoriertaigh  of 
Teighm,  Colloigh  M'Moriertaigh  of  Ballevalle,  Ef  McDurlaigh  of  Ballegrand, 
Peppard  of  Glaskarge,  Patrick  McPhelin  of  Monalstrum,  Waffer  of  Balemony, 
Caier  McEf  of  Corranvredy,  William  McEdmond  of  Remremond,  Caier  Row  of  the 
Rahine,  Edmond  McCarr  of  Tomduff,  Thomas  Boy  of  Ballegerall,  James  M'Oyn 
of  Rathnetesky,  Dermot  Boy  of  Moumecloigh,  David  Mor  Phelin  of  Ascongeray, 
Redmond  MThelin  of  Balemees,  Thomas  McShane  of  Moymmer,  Mortie  Nur 
of  Ballencurre,  Thomas  Finne  of  Ballewallken,  Terrelaigh  MThelin  of  Ballelosk, 
Broy  of  Killtynnen,  Morraigh  Mor  of  Kilbride,  Shane  Banne  of  Clowrann,  Teg 
McDary  of  the  Slaune,  Brassell  O'Bolger  of  Ballevalter,  Dermot  O'BoIger  of  the 
same,  Donagh  McGerott  of  Ballerah,  Edmond  McMoraighe  of  Balleheyne,  Der- 
mot McYllrem  of  Balegufnndowe. 

The  High  Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Gwery. — John  Brassell  of  Balecargin, 
Teg  McGerote  Gill  Patrick  MThoms  of  Balehedin. 

The  Gentlemen  of  the  Barony  of  Gwery. — Hugh  Bellaigh  McDermot  of 
Balle,  Edmond  Duf  MTJermot  of  Lunnaigh,  Donnaigh  Oge  M'Dermot  of 
Balleolouagh,  Terrelaigh  McCreen  of  Balebane,  Colloigh  McKeen  of  Cal- 
lonok,  Teg  Bellaigh  McDonnaigh  of  the  Cloane,  Art  McDonnell  Ban  of  the 
Balekestan,  Gillpatrick  McDonill  of  Killpatrick,  McDonill  of  Cowbrodd,  Oyn 
McDonill  Bane  of  Killpatrick,  Gillpatrick  Oge  McLisaigh  of  Mongaroe,  Walsh  of 
Clonranye,  Donill  Reaigh,  McPhelim  of  Killmehell,  Donnaigh  M'Gerrot  of  the 
same,  Moraigh  McBrene  of  Rathperise,  Gerot  McDonill  Owr  of  Ballegolen,  Art 
McDonnaigh  Oge  of  Ballenrana,  Donill  McDonnaigh  of  .  .  .  Fairdarraigh 
MTrane  of  Ballekargy,  Moraigh  Duff  of  Balleege,  Braune  M'Ynnes  of  Cor- 
ratobbann,  Gerot  McDonull  of  Kildowdy,  Gerot  McOyn  of  the  same,  Edmond 
M'Caier  of  the  Cullentraigh,  Gerot  McCaier  of  Balle  Arte,  Lisaigh  Duff  M'Ynnes 
of  Bellegarie,  Phelin  McMoriertaigh  Bwy  of  Killnehell,  Terrelaigh  Buie  M'Kenee 
of  Ballemont,  Teg  McMiertagh  of  Rosmaynock,  Dyn  M'Mousseoge  of  Ballerayne, 
Edmond  M'Brene  Bwy  of  Ballecarall,  Morishe  MTJonull  of  Illanstrassock,  Art 
Owr  M'Moroighe  Oge  of  the  Creagh  Baleraen,  Gerot  M'Moroighe  Oge  of  the 
Creegh,  Terrelaigh  M'Moroighe  Oge  of  the  same,  Eff  M'Thomas  Oge  of  Ballentee, 
Gerald  M'Edmond  of  Coaleshill,  Dermot  Owr  McShemmone  of  the  Gesr,  Ed- 
mund M'Moriertaigh  of  Ballenrath,  Moraigh  M'Cormicke  of  Tomcoyle. 

The  High  Constables  of  the  Barony  of  Starrowalshe.— Synot  of  Ballevall, 
Moriertaigh  M'Donull  of  Ballenrayse. 


APPENDIX.  259 

Tlu  Gentlemen  of  the  Barony  of  Starrowalshe. — Dowlen  McBrenn  of  Tiscorre, 
Owen  Donull  of  Toram  Dire,  Richard  McDonull  of  Garesinotte,  Arte  McCaier 
of  Babbarne,  Arte  McDonull  Owr  of  Killcowlen,  Bren  MTJonill  Owr  of  Mar- 
shallston,  Gillpatrick  McMalaghlyn  of  Ballebockran,  Moraigh  McArtmore  of 
Straghmor,  William  McDonill  Owr  of  Kowllungiste,  Morishe  McDonill  Owr  of 
Marshalstown,  Farganman  McMoriertaigh  of  Asconghin,  Donnaigh  Ballaigh  of 
Monganestone,  Donnell  McEf  of  Davestoune,  Edmond  McGerot  of  Baledigane, 
Shane  Duff  M'Shemes  of  Ballelosch,  Shane  Reaigh  of  Balledegane,  Dorlough 
MeKo\vllse  of  Cromok,  Teg  McOyn  Mor  of  the  same,  Art  McMoriertaigh  of 
Clonyardom,  Gerotte  McYnnes  of  Manglisse,  Donull  McBrenne  of  Balleouddane, 
Dermot  Reaigh  of  Ballecullaigh,  Dermot  McPhersone  of  Mayne,  Phersone, 
Robert  McBreene  of  Rosseharde,  Nicholas  McEdrnond  of  the  same. 

Copia  Vera. 

Per  Walter  Talbot,  Gierke  of  the  Crown  and  Peace  in  the  County  of  Wexford. 

Endorsed  by  Carew — Justices  of  the  Peace,  Coroners,  Constables,  Jurymen,  &c, 
within  the  Counties  of  Kildare,  Catherlough,  Kilkenny,  and  Wexford,  in 
anno  1608.- — Abridged  from  Car.  Cal.,  an.  1608,  pp.  23-35. 

Wicklow. — See  supra,  p.  40. 
'  Thence  (from  Wexford)  we  came  to  Wicklow,  where  there  appeared  such  a 
multitude  of  the  natives  of  that  country,  that  it  seemed  strange  that  so  many 
souls  should  be  nourished  in  these  wild  and  barren  mountains.' — Sir  J.  Davis,  in 
Car.  Cal.,  an.  1606,  p.  16. 


26o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


PRESENT  REPRESENTATIVES  OF  THE  FAMILIES 

OIF     159S. 


Families  of  16  th  century. 

LOUTH.- 

Plunket,  4*  Baron  of  Louth. 

Sir  J.  Bellew  of  Willystown,  M.P.  for 
Louth  in  1637. 

Gernon  of  Killencowle  d.  in  1613; 
from  his  brother,  Richard  Gernon  of 
Gernonstown,  descends 

Sir  Garret  Moore  of  Mellefont,  whose 
father  settled  in  Ireland. 

Sir  W.  Taaffe,  who  distinguished  him- 
self in  lighting  against  O'Neill. 

Peter  Taaffe  of  Pepparstown. 

Down.- 

Russell  of  Quoniamstown  and   Bally- 

strew,  m.  Miss  Fleming  of  Slane ;  he 

d.  in  1605. 
Patrick  Savage,  'Lord  of  Little  Ards,'  d. 

in  1603.     From  his  brother  descend 
Sir  E.  Chichester,  brother  of  Sir  Arthur, 

who  was  Lord  Deputy  in  1604. 
Sir   Moses    Hill   came  in    1573;   was 

Governor  of  Olderfleet  Castle. 
Captain  Needham,  a  settler. 
Pottinger,  a  settler. 
Ward,  a  settler  in  1570. 

Antrim. - 
Brian  Mac  Felim  O'Neill,  Chief  of 
Clannaboy,  and  Senior  of  the  Kinel- 
Owen  ;  m.  i°  a  dau.  of  Magennis,  20 
a  dau.  of  Brian  Carrach  O'Neill. 
From  his  son,  Shane  M'Brian  of 
Edenduffcarrick,  now  Shane's  Castle, 
who  d.  in  161 9,  descends 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 
-See  p.  4. 

The  13th  Baron  of  Louth. 

Lord  Bellew  of  Barmeath,  Louth ;  Sir  C. 

Grattan  Bellew,  Mount  Bellew,  Galway. 
Gernon  of  Hammondstown,  Louth,  and 

Athcarne  Castle,  Meath. 

The    Marquess   of  Drogheda,    Moore 

Abbey,  Kildare. 
The  io,h  Viscount  Taaffe  of  the  Castle 

of  Elixhaw,  Bohemia. 
Taaffe  of  Smarmor  Castle,  Louth. 

-See  p.  6. 
Count  Russell  of  Killough ;  Dr.  Russell, 

President  of  Maynooth. —  Ulster  J. 

of  Arch. 
Savage  (now  named  Nugent)  of  Porta- 

ferry;  and  Savage  of  Ballymadun. 
The  Marquess  of  Donegal;  and  Lord 

Templemore. 
The    Marquess    of    Downshire ;    and 

Viscount  Dungannon. 
Earl  of  Kilmorey,  Morne  Park,  Down. 
Sir  H.  Pottinger  of  Mount  Pottinger. 
Viscount  Bangor,  Castle  Warde,  Down. 

-See  p.  13. 

O'Neill  of  Ballymoney,  Co.  Down,  a 
farmer,  who,  since  the  death  of  Vis- 
count O'Neill,  is  head  of  the  Kinel 
Owen.  The  present  Lord  O'Neill 
of  Shane's  Castle  is  of  the  family  of 
Chichester.  —  0  Donovan' s  Four 
Masters,  p.  1678. 


APPENDIX. 


26l 


Families  of  1 6tli  century. 

Hugh  Oge  O'Neill  of  Shanescastle 
joined  Tyrone;  his  son  Brian,  Lord 
of  the  Feeva,  is  ancestor  of 

O'Neill  of  Mullaghgane  in  the  Feevagh. 

Sorley  Boy  McDonnell  m.  a  dau.  of 
O'Neill  Ist  Earl  of  Tyrone,  and  had 
five  sons ;  his  eldest  son  was  Sir 
James  Lord  of  the  Route  and 
Glynnes.  His  second  son  was  Sir 
Randal  Ist  Earl  of  Antrim. — O' Dono- 
van's Four  Masters,  p.  1896. 


Grogan  or  Geoghegan  of  Antrim.     His 
son  settled  in  Wexford. 


Cahal  O'Hara  of  the  Route,  owner  of 
Loghgiele,  Legan-lic  and  Crebilly. 

Shane  Dhu  McNaughtone  came  to  Ire- 
land in  1580  as  Secretary  to  McDon- 
nell. 

Dalwaye,  who  came  in  1573,  and  was 
Mayor  of  Carrigfergus  in  1592.  His 
nephew  is  ancestor  of 

J.  Dobbs  came  to  Ireland  with  Sir  H. 
Docura  in  1596. 

Captain  Upton  came  in  159S. 

Armagh.  - 
Donnell  Mac  Canna,   Chief  of  Clan- 
brassil. 

O'Neill  of  the  Fews. 


Sir  W.  Caulfield,  brother  of  the  famous 
Sir  Toby  Caulfield,  a  settler. 

Dawson,  a  settler  temp.  Eliz. 

Vesey  came  temp.  Eliz. ;  his  son  be- 
came Archdeacon  of  Armagh. 


Representatives  in  the  1  gt/i  century. 
C.  H.  O'Neill  (Clannaboy)  Blessington 
Street,  Barrister-at-law. 

J.  F.  O'Neill  Lentaigne,  of  Tallaght, 
Co.  Dublin,  maternally. 

From  Sir  James  descended  Sir  Randal 
McDonnell,  Colonel  of  the  Irish 
Brigade,  who  d.  in  1740,  when  the 
property  fell  to  his  brother  John. 
From  the  ist  Earl  of  Antrim  descend 
(maternally)  the  Earl  of  Antrim,  and 
Armstrong-McDonnell  of  New  Hall, 
Clare,  and  the  Marquess  of  London- 
derry. 

Grogan  Morgan  of  Johnstown  Castle, 
Wexford,  represented  by  Lord  Mus- 
kerry,  and  the  daughters  of  the  Earl 
of  Granard. 

O'Hara  of  Cleggan. 

Sir  E.  Macnachten,  Bart.,  Dunderrane, 
Antrim. 

Dalway  of  Bella  Hill,  Carrigfergus. 


Dobbs  of  Castle  Dobbs. 

Viscount    Templeton,    Castle    Upton, 
Antrim. 

-See  p.  19. 
The  late  Major  Mac  Cann  of  Louth 

was  his  representative. — (J Donovan's 

Notes  to  Tribes  of  Ireland. 
The  Right  Hon.  R.  More  O'Ferrall  of 

Balyna,  Kildare  (maternally). — MS. 

Pedigree    of    O  Moore,    by    the   last 

OMoore. 
Earl  of  Charlemont,  Castle  Caulfield, 

Armagh. 
Lord  Cremome  of  Dartrey,  Monaghan. 
Viscount  De  Vesci,  Abbeyleix,  Queen's 

Co. 


262  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 

Monaghan. — See  p.  23. 
Families  of  i6tk  century.  Representatives  in  the  lgtli  century. 

Colonel  Sir  E.  Blayney  came  in  1598.       Lord  Blayney,  Blaney  Castle,   Mona- 
ghan. 

Fermanagh. — See  p.  24. 
Hugh    Maguire,   the    famous    general      Hugh  Maguire,  who  mortgaged  Tempo; 
of  O'Neill's    cavalry,   and  Chief   of         his    eldest    son,    Constantine,    was 
Fermanagh,  got   two  bullets  in  his  murdered  in   1834,   leaving  a   son. 

breast  in  1599  from  Sir  Warham  St.  His    second    son,    Brian,    a    brave 

Leger,    '  whom   he    strake   into   the  officer    and    famous    fire-eater,   left 

brain.'    Hugh's  brother,  Cuconnacht,  several  sons,  who  are  sailors  in  coal 

d.  in  1608,  leaving  a  son  Brian,  who  vessels  sailing  between  Dublin  and 

was  restored  to  a  part  of  his  pro-  Wales. — O'Donovan's     Annals,      p. 

perty     called     Tempodessel,     now  2366. 

Tempo. 
Archdall,  a  settler  temp.  Eliz.  Archdall     of    Castle     Archdall,     Fer- 

managh. 
Sir  Basil  Brooke,  Elizabethan  officer.         Sir  V.  A.  Brooke  of  Cole-Brook,  Bart., 

Fermanagh. 
Barton  came  with  Essex.  Barton  of  Clonelly,    Co.   Fermanagh  ; 

B.  of  Grove,  and  B.  of  Rochestown, 
Tipperary ;  B.  of  Straffan,  Kildare. 

Tyrone. — See  p.  25. 
None. 

Coleraine  or  Derry. — See  p.  28. 

O'Kane  of  Dungiven.  O'Kane,   gardener    to    Mr.    Bruce   of 

Donnhiel,  Londonderry. — O'Dono- 
van's Annals,  p.  1829. 

Donal  O'Cahan,  Chieftain  in  1598.  Kyan  of  Ballymurtagh,  Co.  Wicklow. 

O'Carolan  of  Culkeragh  Castle.  Cardan  of  Dublin. —  Cronelly. 

Donegal. — See  p.  29. 

Nial  Garbh  O'Donnell  Baron  of  Lif-  O'Donnell   of  Ross,  in    Mayo,    'The 

ford,  who  was  proclaimed  O'Donnell  O'Donnell,'   an   officer   in   the  88th 

arc.  1602  ;  imprisoned  in  the  Tower  Regiment ;   and  Sir   R.  O'Donnell, 

from  1608  to  1628,  where  he  died.  Bart.,  Newport. 

Hugh   Buidhe,   next   brother  of  Nial  O'Donnell  of  Larkfield,  Co.  Leitrim. 

Garbh ;  one  of  his  descendants  was 

a   Field    Marshal   of   Austria,    who 

commanded  at  the  battle  of  Torgau. 


APPENDIX. 


263 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 

Con  Oge  O'Donnell,  another  and 
younger  brother  of  Nial  Garbh,  was 
slain  in  1601  by  Hugh  Roe  O'Don- 
nell's  soldiers,  who  were  besieging 
the  castle  of  Donegal,  which  was 
defended  by  Niall  Garbh. 

John,  brother  of  Sir  Cahir  O'Docherty, 
Chief  of  Inishowen. 


Captain  Paul  Gore,  a  settler. 

M'Clintock,  a  settler  temp.  Eliz. 
Wray    of   Carnegilla,    a   settler 
Eliz.  (?). 


temp. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 
O'Donnell  of  Castlebar.  The  Duke 
of  Tetuan,  in  Spain.  Graf  O'Donell 
von  Tyrconell. — O' 'Donovan's  Appen- 
dix to  Four  Masters,  pp.  2378  to 
2420. 

Lieutenant-General  Sir  R.  Doherty, 
son  of  Doherty  of  Coolmoyne,  Tip- 
perary. 

Sir  St.  George  Gore,  Bart.,  of  Manor 
Gore,  Donegal. 

McClintock  of  Drumcar,  Louth. 

Wray  of  Oak  Park,  Donegal. 


Dublin. — See  p.  37. 


The  21st  Baron  of  Howth  d.  in  1606. 

Archbold  of  Dublin  or  Naas. 

Bellew  of  Weston.      Compare  note  e 

at  p.  39. 
Blacknie  of  Rickenhore. 

Luttrell,  of  Luttrelstown,  whose  male 
line  ended  in  the  3rd  Earl  of  Car- 
hampton. 

Alderman  Alexander  Palles  of  Dublin, 
whose  descendants  in  Dublin  and 
Cavan  were  attainted  in  1641.  He 
d.  in  1603. 

Sir  Christopher  Plunket  of  Dunsoghly. 

Sarsfield  of  Lucan. 

Walter  Segrave  of  Cabra,  Lord  Mayor 
in  1588  ;  d.  in  162 1.  His  son  John 
was  m.  to  a  dau.  of  Alderman  Fagan 
about  the  year  1598. 

Sir  R.  Talbot  of  Malahide. 

J.  Talbot  of  Templeoge. 

J.  Ussher,  Mayor  of  Dublin  in  1561  ; 
d.  in  1600,  leaving  a  son,  Sir  William 
of  Donnybrook. 


The  Earl  of  Howth  (the  30th  Baron). 
Archbold  of  Davidstown,  Kildare. 
Stronge-Hussey   of  Westown,    Dublin 

(maternally). 
Blackney  of  Philipstown,  late  of  Bally- 

ellen. 
Luttrell    Saunderson    of    Northbrook 

House,  Hants ;  and  Sir  S.  H.  Stuart 

of  Hartley  Mauduit,  Hants. 
Palles  of  Mount   Palles,  Co.    Cavan, 

father  of  Chief  Baron  Palles. 


Dunne  of  Brittas  and  Dunsoghly  (ma- 
ternally). 

Colthurst  Vesey  of  Lucan  (maternally). 

O'Neill  Segrave  of  Cabra,  Dublin,  and 
Kiltimon,  Wicklow. 


Lord  Talbot  de  Malahide. 
Talbot  of  Mount  Talbot,  Roscommon, 
and  Talbot-Crosbie  of  Ardfert,  Kerry. 
Ussher  of  Eastwell  House,  Galway. 


264 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Dr.  Loftus,  Protestant  Archbishop  of 
Dublin,  came  to  Ireland  circ.  1562, 
and  d.  in  1605.    He  had  20  children. 


Daniel  Molyneux,  Ulster-King-of-Arms 
in  1586,  whose  father  came  to  Ireland 

•  in  1576;  he  m.  a  dau.  of  Sir  W"1, 
Ussher. 

Simon  Purdon  of  Tallaght. 

J.  Rider,  Dean  of  St.  Patrick's,  and 
afterwards  Protestant  Bishop  of 
Killaloe. 


Representatives  in  the  igth  century. 

Loftus  of  Ballycummin,  Co.  Dublin, 
descends  from  the  Primate's  son, 
Sir  Thomas  ;  and  the  Marquess  of 
Ely  (maternally)  from  his  son,  Sir 
Dudley  of  Rathfarnham. 

Sir  Capel  Molyneux,  Bart,  Castle 
Dillon,  Armagh. — Burke  s  Peerage. 


Purdon  of  Tinerana,  Clare ;  Purdon  of 

Lisnabin,  Westmeath. 
De  Rvthre  of  Williamstown,    Kildare. 


WlCKLOW.- 

Byrne  of  Ballintlea  m.  a  dau.  of  Byrne 
of  Ballycurbeg. 

A  son  or  grandson  of  J.  Byrne  of  Bal- 
linacor  settled  at  Killany,  in  Louth, 
circ.  1600. 

OToole. 

J.  Rochford  of  Aghery,  father  of  Colonel 
Prime-Iron  Rochford,  who  was  exe- 
cuted in  1652. 

Sir  E.  Brabazon,  M.P.  for  Wicklow  in 
1585;  became  Baron  Brabazon  in 
1616  ;  d.  in  1625. 

Sir  E.  Wingfield,  a  distinguished  Eliza- 
bethan officer. 


-See  p.  40. 

Lord  de  Tabley  ;  Miss  Byrne  of  Cabin- 
teely ;  Mr.  O'Byrne,  author  of  The 
Naval  Biography. 

Byrne  of  Lisnawilly,  Louth ;  Byrne  of 
Allardstown. 

O'Toole  of  Buxton,  Co.  Wexford. 
Rochford  of  Cloughgrenane,  Carlow. 


The  Earl  of  Meath,  Kilruddery,  Wick- 
low ;  Brabazon  of  Mornington ; 
Brabazon  of  Rath  House. 

Viscount  Powerscourt,  of  Powerscourt, 
Wicklow. 


Kildare.- 

Thomas  FitzGerald,  brother  of  the  14th 
Earl  of  Kildare,  whose  monument  is 
in  the  church  of  Walton-upon- 
Thames. — Archdall. 

Aylmer  of  Lyons. 

Sir  Gerald  Aylmer  of  Donadea,  son  of 
George  A.  of  Cloncurrie,  and  grand- 
son of  Richard  A.  of  Lyons,  was  a 
Baronet  in  1621. 


-See  p.  44. 

The  4th  Duke  of  Leinster,  of  Carton, 
Kildare  (who  is  23"1  Earl  of  Kildare); 
Lord  de  Ros  of  Strangford,  County 
Down. 

Aylmer  of  Deny  House,  Tipperary ; 
Aylmer  of  Painstown,  Kildare. 

Sir  G.  Aylmer,  Bart.,  of  Donadea 
Castle,  Kildare;  Aylmer  of  Walworth 
Castle,  near  Darlington ;  and  (per- 
haps) Aylmer  of  Courtown,  Kildare. 


APPENDIX. 


265 


Families  of  16th  century. 

Sir  H.  Cowley  of  Castle  Carberry, 
grandson  of  Walter  Cowley,  Solicitor- 
General  of  Ireland  in  1537. 

W"1  Eustace,  brother  of  the  3rd  Viscount 
Baltinglass,  who  rebelled  in  1583  ; 
m.  Miss  Ashe  of  Great  Fornaughts, 
Kildare. 

Lattin  of  Morristown-Lattin. 


Whyte  of  Leixlip  d.  in  1599,  leaving  a 

son  aged  16. 
Wolfe  of  Forenaghts. 
Burrowes  m.  a  dau.  of  Sir  A.  Savage  of 

Rheban,  and   2ly,   in   1585,  a  Miss 

Eustace  of  Gilltown. 
Dr.    Meredith,   Protestant    Bishop   of 

Kildare  in  1589. 

R.  Weldon,  came  temp.  Eliz. ;  his  son 
Walter  was  of  St.  John's  Bower, 
Kildare. 


Representatives  in  the  1  gt/i  century. 

The  Earl  of  Mornington,  of  Dangan 
Castle,  Meath ;  the  Duke  of  Wel- 
lington ;  Lord  Cowley. 

Eustace  of  Robertstown,  Kildare,  who 
claims  the  title;  Eustace  of  Corbally, 
Queen's  Co. 

Mansfield  of  Morristown-Lattin;  Lattin 
Thunder  of  The  Lodge,  Westmeath, 
both  maternally. 

Whyte  of  Loughbrickland,  Down,  Cap- 
tain of  H.M.S.  the  Warrior. 

Wolfe  of  Bishop's  Land,  Kildare. 

Sir  E.  Burrowes,  Bart.,  of  Gilltown, 
Kildare. 

Sir  E.  Meredith,  Bart.,  Madaleen,  Kil- 
kenny ;  Sir  H.  Meredith,  Bart.,  of 
Carlandstown,  Meath. 

Sir  A.  Weldon,  Bart.,  Rahenderry, 
Kildare. 


Carlow. — See  p.  50. 


Butler  of  Cloughgrenan,  who  became  a 

Baronet  in  1628. 
Doyle  of  Clonmoney  (?). 
Morgan  Kavanagh  of  Borris,  who  d. 

in  1636. 
Kavanagh  of  Ballyleigh. 


Drought  of  Co.  Carlow,  arc  1600  ;  they 
seem  to  have  been  in  Ireland  since 
the  13th  century. 


Sir    E.  Butler,  Bart.,  of  Garryhundon, 

Carlow. 
Sir  F.  H.  Doyle,  Bart. 
McMorough  Kavanagh  of  Borris  House, 

Carlow. 
Kavanagh  of  Bauck,  near  St.  Mallins, 

Carlow. — OP  Donovan's  Four  Masters, 

1839,  note. 
Drought  of  Lettybrook,  King's  Co. 


Wexford. — See  p.  57. 


Cheevers  of  Ballyhaly. 

Devereux  of  Ballybarna  in  1598,  de- 
scended from  Devereux  of  Balmagir. 

Sir  L.  Esmonde  of  Johnstown  com- 
manded in  1 60 1  a  troop  of  150  horse 
and  foot ;  he  became  Lord  Limerick 
in  1622. 


Cheevers  of  Killyan,  Gal  way. 

Devereux  of  Ballyrankin  House,  Wex- 
ford. 

Sir  J.  Esmonde,  Bart.,  of  Ballynastra, 
Wexford. — Sir  B.  Burke;  but  see 
above,  arc  p.  255. 

2  1, 


266 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 

N.  Forde  of  Coolgreany  d.  in  1605. 

Hore  of  Pole  Hore. 

Hore  of  Harperstown  m.  in  1607  adau. 
of  Keating  of  Kilcoan. 

Kenny  of  Kenny's  Hall,  Royal  Com- 
missioner, Escheator  and  Feodary 
General  in  1596;  he  died  in  1621. 

Lambert  of  Ballyhire,  who  d.  in 
1631. 

A.  Peppard  of  Glascarrig,  grandson  of 
Patrick  Peppard  of  Louth. 

Rossiter  andDevereux,  'ancient  houses, 
whose  heiress,  Letitia  Little,'  m.  the 
ancestor  of 

Stephen  Synnot,  son  of  Synnot  of  Bally- 
tramon. 

Talbot,  Clerk  of  the  Crown  for  Wex- 
ford, m.  a  dau.  of  Bolane  of  Talbots- 
tovvn,  Wexford;  and  his  son  m.  a 
dau.  of  Sir  W.  Synnot  of  Ballyfarnage. 

Bryan  Tenche  of  Mullinderry. 

Captain  Paul  Gore  settled  temp.  Eliz. 


Rev.  T.  Ram  came  in  1599; 

Bishop  of  Ferns  in  1605. 
Swan  came  with  Essex  in  1599 


he  was 


Representatives  in  the  1  gth  century. 
Forde  of  Seaforde,  Down. 
Hore  of  Pole  Hore. 
Hore  of  Harperstown,  Wexford. 

Kenny  of  Kilclogher,  and  Kenny  of 
Correndoo,  in  Galway ;  Kenny  of 
Ballyforan,  Roscommon. 

Lambert  of  Caruagh,  Wexford. 

Peppard  of  Cappagh  House,  Limerick. 

Sir  W.  Sarsfield-Rositer-Cockburn, 
Bart.,  of  Cockburn,  Berwickshire. 

Synnot  of  Ballymoyer,  Armagh. 

Talbot  of  Castle  Talbot,  Co.  Wexford. 


Tenche  of  Ballyhaly  House,  Wexford. 

The  Earl  of  Arran,  Saunderscourt, 
Wexford;  Sir  G.  Gore-Booth,  Bart., 
of  Lissadill,  Sligo;  Gore  of  Woodford, 
Leitrim. 

Ram  of  Ramsfort,  Wexford. 

Swan  of  Baldwinstown,  Wexford. 


Kilkenny. — See  p.  67. 


The  2d  Viscount  Mountgarret. 

Richard  Baron,  alias  FitzGerald,  the 
Baron  of  Burnchurch. 

Bryan  of  Bawnmore. 

E.  Butler,  ist  Lord  Galmoy,  son  of 
Butler  of  Duiske  Abbey. 

Gerald  Grace  {Marcach  or  the  Horse- 
man) d.  in  1618;  his  son  Oliver 
(Sciavach  or  the  Handsome)  d.  in 
1626;  his  grandson  lost  17,000  acres 
of  land  under  Cromwell. 


The  14"1  Viscount  Mountgarret. 

Sir  Henry  P.  T  Baron,  Bart.,  Baron 
Court ;  Baron  of  Carrig  Baron. 

Bryan  of  Jenkinstown,  Kilkenny. 

Garret  Butler  of  Garrendenny,  Queen's 
Co.,  who  claims  the  title. 

Sir  W.  Grace,  Bart.,  of  Grace  Castle, 
Kilkenny ;  Grace  of  Mantua,  Ros- 
common. 


APPENDIX. 


267 


Families  of  16//1  century. 
Purcell  of  Rathetam. 


Sir  R.  Shee  of  Upper  Court  and  Goran 
d.  in  1608. 


Elias  Shee  of  Clanmore,  brother  of  Sir 
Richard. 

Sir  G.  Flower,  a  distinguished  Eliza- 
bethan officer,  appears  to  have  settled 
in  Kilkenny. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 

Purcell  of  the  Little  Island,  Waterford, 
who  bears  the  name  of  Purcell- 
FitzGerald,  and  is  seated  at  Boulge 
Hall,  Suffolk. 

From  his  son  Lucas  descends  Shee  of 
Cloran ;  from  his  son  Marcus  comes 
Power  O'Shee  of  Sheestown,  Kil- 
kenny, and  Gardenmorris,  Waterford ; 
Colonel  Count  O'Shee  in  France. 

Sir  G.  Shee,  Bart.,  Dunmore,  Galway. 

Viscount  Ashbrook,  Castle  Durrow, 
Kilkenny. 


Queen's  County. — See  p.  73. 


FitzPatrick,  3rd  Lord  of  Upper  Ossory, 
m.  a  dau.  of  O'More. 

Barnaby  O'Dunne  of  Brittas,  Chief  of 
Iregan,  d.  in  1614. 

O'Lalor  of  Desert,  brother  of  the  Chief 
of  that  name.  His  son  or  grandson, 
the  Confederate  Major,  Jeremiah 
Lawlor,  settled  in  Tipperary  arc. 
1666  ;  he  d.  in  1709,  aged  83. 

Calbhach  O'More,  uncle  of  the  Chief, 
Owney  McRory  O'More,  petitioned 
Elizabeth  for  his  country  of  Leix  ; 
he  was  transplanted  to  Balyna,  the 
property  of  the  Delahoyds  of  Kildare. 
In  1600  he  m.  a  dau.  of  Scurlog  of 
the  Frayne,  Co.  Meath. 

Pigott,  who  got  a  grant  of  Dysart  in 
1562,  had  a  son,  Sir  A.  Pigott  of 
Dysart. 

Cosby  of  Stradbally  Abbey,  whose 
father  and  brother  were  slain  at  the 
battle  of  Stradbally  Bridge,  fighting 
against  the  O'Mores. 

Brereton  got  in  1594  grants  of  Shana- 
mullen,  etc. 


FitzPatrick  of  Grantstown  Manor, 
Queen's  Co. ;  Baron  de  Robeck  of 
Gowran  Grange,  Kildare  (maternally). 

Dunne  of  Brittas,  Queen's  Co. ;  Doyne 
of  Wells,  Wexford,  is  said  to  be  of 
the  same  stock. 

Lalor  of  Cregg,  and  (maternally)  Power 
Lalor  of  Long  Orchard,  in  Tipperary. 


Right  Hon.  R.  More-O'Ferrall  of  Balyna, 
Kildare,  great  grandson  of  James, 
the  last  O'More,  who  d.  in  1779.— 
MS.  History  of  the  O'Mores,  written 
in  1775  by  the  last  O'More,  whose 
only  child  m.  Richard  O'Ferrall, 
Esq.,  of  Ballinree,  Longford. 

Sir  C.  Pigott,  Bart.,  Knapton,  Queen's 
Co. 

Cosby  of  Stradbally  Hall,  Queen's  Co. 


Brereton  of  Carrigslany,  Carlow. 


268 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  16th  century. 
Sir  C.   Coote  of  Castle  Cuffe  served 
against  O'Neill. 

King's  County 
Brassil  Fox  of  Kilcoursey,  Chief  of  his 
name,  m.  a  dau.  of  Mac  Geoghegan 
of  Castletown  ;  he  died  in  1639  ;  he 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 

Sir  C.  Coote,  Bart.,  of  Bally  fin,  Queen's 

Co.;  Sir  C.  Coote,  Bart.,  Dublin. 

. — See  p.  81. 

Fox  of  Kilcoursey,  King's  Co. 


was  nephew  of 
who  d.  in  1600. 
Mac  Cochlain. 


Hubert  :  The  Fox,' 


O'Carroll. 


'  Cahir,  Maurice  and  John  O'Connor 
were  the  last  who  obtained  the  chief- 
tainship in  1600.'  One  of  these, 
says  Sir  B.  Burke,  was  ancestor  of 


O'Molloy  of  Fircale. 


Briscoe  m.  Eleanor  Kearney  of  Scraghe, 
near  Tullamore  ;  from  an  inscription 
over  the  door  of  the  now  ruined 
castle  of  Scraghe,  it  seems  he  built 
that  castle  in  1588. 

Sir  J.  Moore  of  Croghan  Castle,  whose 
father  settled  at  Croghan. 

L.  Parsons,  brother  of  Sir  William  the 
Lord  Justice. 

Meath.  - 
Preston,  4th  Viscount  Gormanston. 
Plunkett,  9"'  Lord  Killeen. 


The  last  chief  died  40  years  ago,  and 
his  estates  passed  to  the  Dalys  and 
Armstrongs. — (7  Donovan's  Notes  to 
the  Annals,  under  the  year  1585. 
Mr.  Coghlan,  near  Castlebar,  Mayo, 
is  head  of  one  of  the  most  respect- 
able branches. — Notes  to  Tribes  of 
Ireland. 

The  late  Marchioness  of  Wellesley, 
whose  grandfather  in  America  was 
the  undoubted  head  of  that  name. — 
Notes  to  Annals,  an.  1585. 

O'Connor  of  Mount  Pleasant,  who  d. 
in  1 818.  His  daughters  m.  the  Earl 
of  Desart,  Tuite  of  Sonna,  and  Rev. 
B.  Morris,  whose  descendant  is  now 
O'Connor  Morris  of  Gortnamona  or 
Mountpleasant. 

O'Molloy  of  Clonbela,  King's  Co.— 
Notes  to  Annals  an.  1585,  and  Tribes 
of  Ireland. 

Briscoe  of  Riversdale,  Westmeath. 


Earl  of  Charleville  (maternally). 

The  Earl  of  Rosse,  Parsonstown,  King's 
Co. 

-See  p.  92. 
13th  Viscount  Gormanston,  Meath. 
The  Earl    of  Fingal,    Killeen    Castle, 
Meath,  19th  Lord  Killeen. 


APPENDIX. 


269 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Plunkett,  8th  Lord  Dunsany. 

Barnwall,   6th   Baron   of  Trimlestown, 

d.  in   159S,  and  was  succeeded  by 

his  son  Robert. 
Aylmer  of  Balrath.     I  think  he  was  a 

son    of    '  Elmer    of  Dullardstown,' 

Meath. 
Sir  Patrick  Barnwall  of  Crickstown. 


Bath  of  Knightstown. 

Cheevers  of  Macetown— perhaps  recte 

Moreton. 
Cromp  of  Muchalstown. 

R.  Cusack,  14th  Lord  of  Gerrards- 
town,  d.  in  1632  ;  his  tomb  is  in 
Killeen  Church. 

D'Arcy  of  Dunmow  m.  a  dau.  of 
Brandon  of  Uundalk. 

Dease  of  Kilrue. 
Dillon  of  Lismullen. 

Drake  of  Drakerath. 

Patrick  Everard  of  Randalstown  d.  in 
1611. 

John  Netterville  of  Dowth,  M.P.  for 
Meath  in  1585,  d.  in  1601,  leaving 
a  son,  who  became  Viscount  Netter- 
ville. 

Plunket  of  Rathmore,  born  in  1563,  m. 
a  dau.  of  Dillon  of  Moymet. 

Honourable  Martin  Preston  m.  in  1584 
Alison  Herbert. 

Richard  Read  of  Meath,  who  d.  in 
1631. 

Dr.  Jones,  Protestant  Bishop  of  Meath 
from  1584  to  1605. 

Teeling  of  Mullagha. 


Representatives  in  the  1  gt/i  century. 
The    16th    Baron    Dunsany,    Dunsany 

Castle,  Meath. 
The  i6,h  Baron  of  Trimlestown,  Turvey, 

Dublin. 

Lord  Aylmer,  Baron  of  Balrath. 


Sir  Reginald  Barnwall,  Bart,  of 
Crickstown ;  seat,  Grenanstown, 
Meath. 

Sir  H.  De  Bathe  of  Knightstown, 
Meath. 

Cheevers  of  Killyan,  Gahvay. 

Crumpe  of  Co.  Kerry. — See  Miss 
Hicksoiis  Records  of  Kerry. 

Cusack  of  Gerardstown;  seat,  Abbe- 
ville House,  Dublin.  Barker  of 
Dunboyne,  Meath  (maternally). 

D  Arcy  of  High  Park,  Westmeath ;  and 
(maternally)  DArcy  Irvine  of  Castle 
Irvine,  Fermanagh. 

O'Reilly  Dease,  Charleville,  Louth. 

Sir  J.  Dillon,  Bart.,  Lismullen, 
Meath. 

Drake  (late)  of  Roristown,  Co. 
Meath. 

Everard  of  Randalstown. 

Viscount  Netterville. 


Lentaigne   of   Tallaght,    Dublin   (ma- 
ternally). 
Preston  of  Ballinter,  Meath. 

Read  of  Wood  Parks,  Scariff. 

Viscount  Ranelagh. 

Captain  Teeling,  Leitrim  Rifles,  late  of 
the  Pontifical  Zouaves. 


270 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Westmeath, 
Families  of  1  6th  century. 
The  14th  Baron  of  Delvin  d.  in  1602  ; 
his  son  became  Earl  of  Westmeath 
in  1621. 


Dease  of  Turbotstown. 

Sir   Patrick   Fox  of  Moyvore,  of  the 

elder  branch  of  the  O'Caharnys  or 

Foxes,  d.  in  161S. 
Magawly  of  Calry. 
Mageoghegan,  Chief  of  Kinaleaghe. 


Nugent  of  Carlandstown  d.  in  1599. 
Nugent  of  Clonlost  d.  in  16 13. 
Nugent  of  Coolamber. 

Nugent  of  Donore  m.  in  1580,  a  dau. 

of  Barn  wall  of  Crickstown  ;  he  d.  in 

1616. 
Nugent  of  Dysart  succeeded  his  brother 

in  1620;  his  wife  was  dau.  of  O'Fer- 

rall  of  Mornin. 

Tuite  of  Sonagh,  born  circ.  1588,  made 

Baronet  in  1622. 
Sir  E.   Packenham  came  with  Sydney 

in  1576;  his  grandson  had  the  lands 

of  Tullynally,  Westmeath. 
Captain  Piers  came  to  Ireland  in  1566; 

got  1000  marks  in  1569  for  bringing 

the  head  of  Shane  O'Neill ;  got  the 

Abbey  of  Tristernagh. 
Captain  Pollard  of  Essex's  army  came 

in  1598  or  1599. 


— See  p.  102. 

Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 

The  Earl  of  Westmeath,  who  is  23rd  Baron 
of  Delvin  ;  seat,  Pallas,  Co.  Galway. 
Also  Count  Nugent  of  Killasonna, 
and  Prince  Nugent  of  Austria ;  ma- 
ternally the  children  of  Lord  Greville 
of  Clonyn. 

Dease  of  Turbotstown. 

Fox  of  Fox  Hall,  Longford. 


Count  Magawly-Cerati. 

O'Neill  of  Bunowen  Castle,  Co.  Galway, 
whose  real  name  is  Mageoghegan; 
maternally,  the  late  Sir  R.  Nagle  of 
Jamestown. 

Maternally,  the  Duke  of  Buckingham. 

Nugent  of  Clonlost. 

Maternally,  J.  Conmee,  Esq.,  Kings- 
land,  Co.  Roscommon. 

Sir  Walter  Nugent  of  Donore,  ma- 
ternally. The  name  of  his  family 
was  FitzGerald. 

Count  Nugent  of  Ballynacorr,  West- 
meath (maternally) ;  Nugent  of 
Portaferry,  and  Sir  C.  Nugent,  Bart., 
of  Ballinlough. 

Sir  M.  Tuite,  Bart.,  of  Kilruane,  Tippe- 
rary  ;  Tuite  of  Sonagh,  Westmeath. 

The  Earl  of  Longford,  Packenham 
Hall,  Westmeath. 

Sir  E.  F.  Piers  of  Tristernagh  Abbey, 
Westmeath,  8"'  Baronet. 


Pollard   Urquhart   of   Castle   Pollard, 
Westmeath. 


O'Ferrall  of  Ballinree,  &c. 


Longford. — See  p.  113. 

Right  Hon.  R.  More  O'Ferrall,  Balyna 
House,  Kildare,  and  Ballinree, 
Longford. 


APPENDIX. 


271 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
O'Farrel  of  Mornin. 


Sir  Francis  Shaen  (O'Farrell). 

The  Edgworths  settled  circ.  1583. 
The  brother  of  Edgworth,  Bishop 
of  Down  and  Connor,  was  ancestor 
of 


Representatives  in  the  igth  century. 
Maternally,    O'Farrell    of    Dalystown, 

Galway  ;  and  Nugent  of  Ballinacorr, 

Westmeath. 
Maternally,    Kirwan   of    Castlehacket, 

Galway. 
The   Edgeworths   of  Edgeworthstown 

and  Kilshrewly,  Longford. 


Cavan. — 1 
Edmund    O'Reilly    of    Kilnacrott, 
Chieftain,  who  d.  in  1601. 


O'Reilly,  whose  descendant  was  Hugh 
O'Reilly  of  Ballinlough,  Westmeath. 

Nugent  of  Enagh,  Cavan,  son  of  Nugent 
of  Rathwire,  Meath. 

Sir  Oliver  Lambert  came  with  Essex, 
became  Baron  of  Cavan  in  1617. 

Hamilton  of  Coronary. 


See  p.  117. 

O'Reillys  of  Heath  House,  Queen's 
Co.;  of  Knock  Abbey,  Louth;  Count 
O'Reilly  of  Cuba ;  O'Reilly,  Attor- 
ney-General in  Jamaica ;  O'Reillys 
of  Baltrasna  and  Scarvagh. — O' Dono- 
van's Notes  to  Annals,  year  1601. 

Sir  Charles  Nugent,  Bart.,  of  Ballin- 
lough, Westmeath. 

Nugent  of  Bobsgrove,  Cavan. 

The  Earl  of  Cavan  ;  Lambart  of  Beau 

Park. 
Hamilton  of  Abbotstown,  Dublin. 


O'Brien,  5"'  Baron  of  Inchiquin. 
Brady  of  Tomgrany. 
James  Butler  of  Shanagollen. 
Comyn  of  Kilcorney. 
FitzGerald  of  Rynana. 

Hickie,  near  Killaloe. 
MacMahon,  Chief  of  Corcabhascin. 


Finin  Mac   Namara   of  Rosroe  d.  in 

1 60 1.     His  son  Shioda  was  ancestor 

of 
His  son  Convea  Reaghof  Clonmoynagh 

and  Ardclony,  who  d.   in  1625,  was 

ancestor  of 


Clare. — See  p.  124. 

The  Duke  of  Leinster  (maternally). 

Brady  of  Myshall  Lodge,  Co.  Carlow. 

Butler  of  Ballyline,  Co.  Clare. 

Comyn  of  Woodstock,  Galway. 

Sir  A.  FitzGerald,  Newmarket-on-Fer- 
gus,  Clare. 

Hickie  of  Killelton,  Kerry. 

Coppinger  of  Barryscourt,  Cork  (ma- 
ternally).— Tribes  of  Ireland,  notes. 

McMahon,  Marshal,  President  of  the 
French  Republic,  is  of  this  race. 

Mac  Namara  of  Ayle,  Clare. 


Maj  or  M'Namara  Bouchier  (maternally). 


272 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Mac  Namara,  of  a  junior   branch  of 

the  '  Eastern  McNamaras.' 
O'Brien  of  Carraduff,  whose  son  Donal 

lost  his  lands  in  1652. 
O'Brien  of  Duagh. 


O'Briens  of  Leaghmenagh  and  Dromo- 
land. 

O'Brien,  son  of  Sir  Tirlough  O'Brien. 


O'Hogan  of  Cross. 
O'Loghlin. 


O'Molony  of  Kiltannon,  whose  grand- 
son was  Bishop  of  Limerick  in  1687. 

Cuffe,  merchant  of  Ennis,  and  nephew 
of  Hugh  Cuffe,  who  got  6000  acres 
of  the  Desmond  lands. 

Lewin  settled  in  Ireland  in  1586. 

Galway.— 
Ulick,  3rd  Earl  of  Clanrickarde,  d.  in 

1601. 
Edmund  Burke  of  Kilcornan,  son  of 

the  3rd  Earl  of  Clanrickarde. 
The  13th  Lord  Athenry  d.  in  1614. 


Athy  of  Galway. 

Robert  Blake  of  Ardfry,  father  of  the 

Speaker  of  the  Supreme  Council. 
Andrew  Blake  of  Cummer  and  Bally- 

glunin. 
V.     Blake     FitzWalter     FitzThomas, 

Mayor  of  Galway  in  161 1 ;  a  Bart. 

in  1622. 
Blake,  Mayor  of  Galway  in  1564,  m.  a 

dau.  of  Valentine  French. 


Representatives  in  the  19th  century. 

Mac  Namara  of  Ennistymon. — (7 Dono- 
van's Notes  to  Annals,  year  1585. 

O'Brien  of  Ballynalacken. 

(Maternally)  Marshal  MacMahon, 
President  of  the  French  Republic. — 
Cronelly's  Irish  Families. 

Lord  Inchiquin  of  Dromoland  ;  Staf- 
ford O'Brien  of  Blather wicke,  Nor- 
thamptonshire. 

O'Brien  of  Glencolumkille,  Clare. — 
O' Donovan's  Notes  to  year  1585  of 
the  Annals. 

O'Brien  of  Ballynalacken,  Clare  (ma- 
ternally). 

O'Loghlin  of  Newtown ;  Sir  Colman 
O'Loghlen  is  a  junior  branch. — 
O'Donoz'an's   Notes  to    Annals,   an. 

The  Molonys  of  Kiltannon  and  Gra- 
nahan,  Clare. 


Ross-Lewin  of  Ross  Hill,  Clare. 

■See  p.  131. 
The   Marquess   (15th   Earl)    of    Clan- 
rickarde, Portumna,  Galway. 
(Maternally)  Redington  of  Kilcornan. 

Bermingham  of  Dalgan,  Galway ;  and 
(maternally)  Lords  Howth  and 
Clonbrock. 

Athy  of  Renville,  Galway. 

Lord  Wallscourt,  Ardfry,  Galway. 

Blake  of  Balglunin,  Galway ;  and  Sir  — 

Blake,  Bart.,  of  Langham,  Suffolk. 
Sir  V.  Blake,  Bart.,  of  Menlo,  Galway. 


Blake  of  Renvyle,  Galway. 


APPENDIX. 


2  73 


Families  of  1.6th  century. 

Blake,  son  of  Marcus  Blake  of  Galway, 

bought  lands  in  Mayo  from  David 

O'Kelly    of   Dunamona;   he    d.    in 

1633. 
FitzRichard  Blake  of  Kiltullagh  Castle, 

Mayor  of  Galway  in  1578. 
Bodkin,  Sheriff  of  Galway  in  1570,  was 

father  of  John  Bodkin. 
Browne   of  Barna    m.    a   dau.    of  Sir 

Morogh  O' Flaherty;  he  d.  in  1596. 

His  son  Oliver  is  ancestor  of 
His  son  Geoffrey  ancestor  of 

His  son  Thomas. 

His  son  James. 

His  son  Andrew. 

Ulicke  Burke  of  Castlehacket,  son  of 

John   Burke,  and   Miss  O'Kelly  of 

Mullaghmore. 
Burke  of  Glinsk,  Lord  of  Clanconow. 

Burke  of  Gortenacuppoge. 

Burke  of  Meelick. 

Theobald  Butler  of  Cregg. 

D'Arcy  Riavagh  (the  swarthy)  Vice- 
President  of  Connaught,  d.  in  1603. 
His  monument  is  in  the  Franciscan 
Abbey,  Galway. 

Thomas  Dillon  of  Clonbrock  in  Gal- 
way, and  Curraboy  in  Roscommon, 
Chief  Justice  of  Connaught,  d.  in 
1606. 

William  Dolphin  of  Turoe. 

Redmond  Dolphin  of  Brackloonmore. 
Fonte,  Mayor  of  Galway. 

Ffrench  of  Castle  Ffrench. 

French  of  Monivea  Castle  d.  in  16 18. 

French  of  Mulpit. 

Patrick  Kirwan  of  Cregg. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 
Blake  of  Ballynafad,  Mayo. 


Blake  of  Kiltullagh,  and  Blake  of  Cregg. 
Bodkin  of  Annagh,  Galway. 
Browne  of  Kilskeagh,  Galway. 


Lord  Oranmore  and  Browne ;  Browne 

of  Browne  Hall,  Mayo. 
The  Brownes   of  Newtown,   Ardskea, 

and  Cooloo. 
Browne  of  Tuam. 
Browne  of  Moyne. 
Burke  of  Ower. 


Sir  J.  L.  Burke  of  Glinsk,  1 1*  Baronet ; 
also  Burke  of  Knocknagur. 

Sir  T.  J.  Burke  of  Marble  Hill  (alias 
Gortenacuppoge),  3rd  Baronet 

Burke  of  Elm  Hall,  Tipperary ;  Burkes 
of  Slatefieldand  St.  Cleran's,  Galway. 

Butler  of  Cregg. 

D'Arcy  of  Newforest ,  D'Arcy  of  Well- 
fort,  and  D'Arcy  of  Kiltulla,  all 
in  Galway. 

Lord  Clonbrock  of  Clonbrock,  Galway. 
— See  ArchdalFs Lodge,vo\.\v.,  p.  138. 


Dolphin   of   Turoe,   and    Dolphin   of 

Danesfort,  Galway. 
Dolphin  of  Corr,  Galway. 
Geoffrey  Fonte  d.  in  18 14,  aged  104, 

the  last  of  the  race. — Hardiman. 
Lord  Ffrench  of  Castle  French,  Galway. 
French  of  Monivea  Castle,  Galway. 
St.  George  of  Tyrone  House,  Galway. 
Kirwan  of  Bawnmore. 

2  M 


274 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1 598. 


Families  of  16th  century. 
Edmund  Airgid  Kirvvan    (2nd   son  of 

Patrick  Kirwan  of  Cregg)  d.  in  1608. 
Martin  O'Quirivane  of  Tobercaoch  (Blind 

Well). 
Lawrence   of  Ballymore,  whose  father 

settled  in  that  place,  m.  in   1603  a 

dau.    of  Garret    Moore   of   Breeze, 

Mayo. 
Martin  of  Ross  ;  his  son  Jasper  d.  in 

1630. 
Martin  of  Tullyra. 
In    1578    O'Daly  of  Killymore  got  a 

grant  of  the  manor    of  Larha ;  his 

sons  were  Teig  and  Donough. 
O'Donelan,    Protestant  Archbishop  of 

Tuam,  'though  neverin  Holy  Orders.' 

Murrough     na     d'Tuagh     O'Flaherty, 

'Chief  of  all  the   O'Flaherties '  in 

1598. 
O'Halloran  of  Barna. 
O'Kelly  of  Aughrim  Castle. 
Hugh   Caoch  O'Kelly  of  Mullaghmore, 

Chief  in  159S. 
Conor  na   Gearbhach  O'Kelly  of  Gal- 

lagh,   sub-chief  of  Hy-Many,  d.    in 

1612. 
Donall  O'Madden. 


Gilladubh  O'Shaughnessy. 

Sir  Dermot  O'Shaughnessy,  who  d.  in 
1606. 


Skerret. 

Blakeney,  who  settled  temp.  Elizabeth. 


Representatives  in  the  igf/i  century. 

Maitland-Kirvvan  of  Dalgin,  Mayo,  and 
Gelston  Castle,  N.B. 

Kirwan  of  Blindwell,  and  perhaps  Kir- 
wan  of  Moyne. 

Lawrence  of  Lisreaghan. 


Martin  of  Ross  House,  Galway. 

Martin  of  Tullyra  Castle,  Galway. 
Daly,  Lord  Dunsandle,  of  Dunsandle, 
Galway. 

The  Donelans  of  Ballydonelan,  ofHills- 
wood,  of  Sylane  and  Peter's  Well, 
and  of  Killagh,  all  in  Galway. 

O'Fflahertie  of  Lemonfield,  Galway. — 
O' Donovan's  Notes  to  year  1585  of 
Annals. 

Lynch  of  Barna,  Galway,  (maternally). 

Kelly  of  Newtown. — Hy-Many. 

Kelly  of  Castle  Kelly,  and  Count 
O'Kelly  of  Montauban. — Hy-Many. 

Count  Conor  O'Kelly  of  Ticooly,  for- 
merly of  Gallagh,  Co.  Galway. — 
O' Donovan's  Hy-Many. 

Madden  of  Streamstown. — Notes  td 
Annals,  an.  1585.  (Maternally) 
More-O'Ferrall  of  Ballyna.—  MS. 
Account  of  the  O 'Mores,  by  James, 
the  last  of  the  O' Mores. 

Mr.  Bartholomew  O'Shaughnessy  of 
Galway. —  O'  Donovan. 

The  late  Catholic  Bishop  of  Killaloe  ; 
Sir  W.  O'Shaughnessy  of  Calcutta ; 
the  late  James  O'Shaughnessy  of 
Clongowes,  Kildare  ;  Rd-  O'Shaugh- 
nessy, Esq.,  M.P.  for  Limerick. — See 
O 'Donovan's  Annals. 

Skerret  of  Finvara,  Clare ;  Skerret  of 
Athgoe  Park,  Co.  Dublin. 

Blakeney  of  Abbert,  Castle  Blakeney, 
Galway. 


APPENDIX. 


275 


Mayo. — See  p.  140, 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Bingham  of  Castlebar,  whose   father, 

the  Governor  of  Sligo,  was  killed  in 

1596. 
Bourke  of  Moneycrower. 
Richard    Ruadh   Bourke    of    Rathroe 

Castle,    Inniscoe,   and    Carrowkeel, 

m.  a  dau.  of  Mc\Villiam. 
Browne  of  the  Neale,  High  Sheriff  of 

Mayo,  whose  grandson  was  made  a 

Baronet  in  1622. 


Sir  C.  Dillon  of  Bealalahin,  son  of  the 

ist  Viscount  Dillon. 
Shane     McCostelloe     of     Castlemore, 

Chief,  m.  in  1586  a  dan.  of  O'Kelly 

of  Screggs,  Roscommon. 
Edmund  McJordan,  Chief  in  1586. 
O'Higgins  of  Moyna. 
O'Malley   (son   of  Brian)    of   Morska 

Castle. 
O'Malley  (Edmund),  nephew  of  Grana- 

uille  O'Malley,  b.  1579,  d.  1651. 
Captain  Atkinson,  Elizabethan  officer. 


Representatives  in  the  ig/h  century. 

The  Earl  of  Lucan,  Castlebar,  Mayo ; 

Lord  Clanmorris,  Newport,  Mayo. 

The  Earl  of  Mayo,  Co.  Kildare. 
Bourke  of  Carrowkiel ;  Bourke  of  Cur- 
raghleagh. 

Lord  Kilmaine  of  the  Neale;  Marquess 
of  Sligo,  Westport,  Mayo  ;  Browne  of 
Breafy,  now  Sir  C.  M.  de  Beauvoir, 
Johnstown,  Dublin  ;  Browne  of  Ma- 
nulla  ;  Browne  of  Raheens,  Mayo. 

Viscount  Dillon,  Loughglynn,  Ros- 
common. 

Costelloe  of  Edmundstown,  Mayo. 


Jordan  of  Rosslevin  Castle,  Mayo 

Higgins  of  Westport. 

Sir  W.  O'Malley,  Bart., Rose  Hill,  Mayo. 

O'Malley  of  The  Lodge,  Co.  Mayo. 

Atkinson  of  Rehins,  Co.  Mayo. 


Sligo. — See  p.  144- 


Donal  O'Conor-Sligo. 


O'Crean  of  Annagh. 

Dathi  O'Dowda,  son  of  Dathi  (slain  in 
1594)  and  nephew  of  O'Dowda, 
elected  by  O'Donnell  in  1595. 


The  last  Chief,  General  O'Conor-Sligo, 
d.  in  1756  ;  the  last  Lady  of  the 
House  of  Hapsburg  erected  a  monu- 
ment to  him  in  the  Church  of  St. 
Gudule,  Brussels.  The  present 
senior  of  the  race  is  a  fanner.  The 
descendants,  maternally,  are  McDer- 
mot  of  Coolavin,  and  O'Connor- 
Donellan  of  Sylane. 

Crean-Lynch  of  Clogher  House,  Mayo 
(maternally). 

O'Dowda  of  Bunnyconnelan,  43rd  in 
descent  from  Eochaidh,  Monarch  of 
Ireland  in  358. — Hy-Fiachra, pedigree 
by  0 Donovan. 


276 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  16th  coilury. 
Cormac  O'Hara  of  Coolany  m.  a  dau. 

O'Gallagher;   he    d.    in   161 2;   his 

son  Teig  was  High  Sheriff  in  1608. 
Sir  Tibbot  Dillon  of  Costello  Gallen, 

Sligo. 
French  of  Gortrassy,  and   Sessueman 

Castle,  Co.  Sligo,  m.  a  dau.  of  O'Con- 

nor-Sligo  ;  he  d.  in  1624. 
Patrick  French  obtained  an  estate  from 

Donagh  O'Conor-Sligo. 
George    Bingham,    Governor   of  Sligo 

in  1596. 
Dodwell  settled  at  Tanrago  circ.  1590. 

Leitrim.- 

Magrannell  of  Magh-Rein,  Chief  of  his 
name. 


O'Rourlc. 

O'Rourke  of  Dromehaire. 


Representatives  in  the  1  gth  century. 
O'Hara    of    Annaghmore,    Co.     Sligo 
(maternally). 

Viscount  Dillon  of  Loughglynn,  Ros- 
common. 
Lord  de  Freyne,  Co.  Roscommon. 

French  of  Cloonyquin,  Co.  Roscommon. 
Lord  Clanmorris,  Newbrook,  Mayo. 
Dodwell  of  Glenmore. 

-See  p.  147. 

The  last  head  was  Squire  Reynolds, 
who  was  murdered  at  Sheemore,  Co. 
Leitrim.  His  dau.  is  Mrs.  McNa- 
mara  of  Lough  Scur  House. — Tribes 
of  Ireland,  p.  35. 

Prince  O'Rork  of  Russia. 

O'Rourke  of  Ballybollen,  Co.  Antrim. 


Roscommon. 

Brian  McDermot  of  Carraig  Locha  Ce      McDermot,  '  Prince  of  Coolavin.' 
(now  Rockingham). 


O'Beirn,  Chief  of  Tir-bruin  na  Sinna. 

Sir  Hugh  O'Conor  Don  of  Ballintubber, 
b.  in  1541,  submitted  in  1581,  d.  in 
1632.  He  mar.  a  d.  of  Sir  Brian 
O'Rourke. 

O'Conor  Roe. 

Rory  O'Kelly  of  Aughrane,  Lord  of 
the  Manor  of  Screen,  and  High 
Sheriff  of  the  Co.  of  Roscommon  in 
1590,  m.  a  dau.  of  O'Kelly  of  Belana- 
more,  or  of  McEdmond  of  Gaille, 
and  had  two  sons — Wm.  Reagh  and 
Captain  Colla.  Wm.  Reagh's  sons 
entered  into  Holy  Orders.  Colla  d. 
in  1615  ;  his  descendants  are 


O'Beirn  of  Dangan-I-Beirn  in  the  same 
territory. — 0'  Donovan. 

O'Conor  Don;  O'C.  of  Mount  Druid, 
of  Dundermott,  and  of  Milton. — Cf. 
Memoir  of  the  G'  Connors,  by  R. 
O'Connor,  Esq.,  also  The  Annals. 

O'Conor  Roe  of  Tomona ;  O'Conor 
Roe  of  Lanesborough. 

Kelly  of  Castle  Kelly  ;  Count  Conor 
O'Kelly,  officer  of  Grenadiers  in 
France,  43rd  in  descent  from  Maine 
Mor;  Thomas  L.  Kelly,  Esq.,  of 
Gardiner  Street,  Dublin. — See  Tribes 
and  Customs  of  Hy-Many  for  an 
account  of  the  Roscommon  families. 


AfPENDIX. 


277 


Families  of  i6t/i  century. 
O' Kelly  of  Athleague. 
Conor  Na  Garvach  O'Kelly  of  Gallagh. 

Captain  Anthony  O'Mulloy,  called  the 
"Green  Mulloy,'  got  land  in  Ros- 
common early  in  Elizabeth's  reign  ; 
had  a  son,  '  the  Great  Mulloy  of 
Uchterthera,'  Governor  of  Roscom- 
mon. 

Moylin  O'Mulconry  of  Tullon,  '  The 
O'Mulconry,'  m.  a  dau.  of  Teig 
O'Flanagan,  Caencloin. 

O'Nachtan,  Chief  of  the  Fews  in  the 
barony  of  Athlone. 

J.  Crofton  of  Ballymurray,  Auditor- 
General. 


Sir  J.  King  of  the  Abbey  of  Boyle. 
Lyster  of  Milltown  Pass. 


Representatives  in  the  igf/i  century. 

Kelly  of  Glencarra,  Co.  Westmeath. 

Conor  O'Kelly  of  Ticooly,  42nd  in  de- 
scent from  Maine  Mor. 

Mulloy  of  Hughstown,  Co.   Roscom- 


Sir  J.  Conroy,  Bart,  of  Bettifield,  Ros- 
common, and  Pennant  Hall,  Mont- 
gomeryshire. 

Naughton  of  Thomastown  Park. — Hy- 
Many,  p.  71. 

Baron  Crofton  of  Mote  Park,  Ros- 
common ;  Sir  M.  Crofton,  Bart.,  of 
Mohill  House,  Leitrim ;  Sir  Malby 
Crofton,  Bart.,  of  Longford  House, 
Sligo. 

Viscount  Lorton ;  Earl  of  Kingston. 

Lyster  of  Lysterfield. 


Waterford. 


Lord  Power. 

The  Lord  FitzGerald  of  Decies. 


Aylward  of  Fathlegg. 

Edward  FitzGerald  of  the  Little 
Island. 

FitzGerald  of  Gurteens. 

Grant  of  Ballygrant. 

Walter  Mansfield  (perhaps  originally 
Mandeville)  m.  a  dau.  of  the  Lord  of 
Dromana. 

Richard  Nugent  of  Cloncoscraine,  de- 
scended from  the  2nd  Baron  of  Delvin. 

Power  of  Ballyhane. 
Power  of  Clashmore. 

Wise  of  of  the  Manor  of  St.  John. 


The  Marquess  ofWaterford  (maternally). 

Lord  Stuart  de  Decies  (maternally) ; 
Mansfield  of  Morristown-Lattin,  Co. 
Kildare  (maternally). 

Aylward  of  Shankhill  Castle,  Co.  Kil- 
kenny. 

Purcell  FitzGerald  of  the  Little  Island 
(maternally). 

FitzGerald  of  Turlough  Park,  Mayo. 

Grant  of  Kilmurry,  Co.  Cork. 

Mansfield  of  Morristown-Lattin,  Co. 
Kildare. 

Sir  J.  Nugent  Humble,  Bart,  of  Clon- 
coscoran  (maternally). — See  Lodge, 
vol.  i.,  p.  221. 

Power  of  Belleville  Park. 

Earl  of  Huntingdon  of  Clashmore  (ma- 
ternally). 

Wise  of  the  Manor  of  St.  John ;  General 
Henry  Wise  of  America. 


278 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 


Families  of  1 6t/i  century.  Representatives  in  the  1  qt/i  century. 

Captain    Drew    of    Kilwinny,    settled      Drew  of  Drewscourt,  Co.  Limerick. 

circ.  1598. 
Osborne  of  Ballintaylor.  Sir  W.  Osborne,  Bart.,  of  Beechwood, 

Tipperary. 


Cork. 


Lord  Barrymore. 

Lord  Courcy,  18th  Baron  of  Kinsale. 

Earl  of  Desmond. 


Wm.  Barry  of  Lislee  (son  of  Viscount 

Buttevant,   who   d.  in   1582),   mar. 

Selah  ny  vy  Carry;  he  d.  in   1594; 

had  a  son  James. 
Garret   Barry    of    Leamlary   m.    Miss 

McCarthy  of  Tuadrommeen  ;  his  son 

John   Laidir  (the   Stout)   m.    Miss 

Nagle  of  Moneanimie. 
Barry  of  Lisnegar  and  Rathcormack, 

styled  '  Mac  Adam  Barry.' 
Burke   of    Clogher,   near   Castletown- 

Roche. 
S.  Coppinger  of  Bally volane  d.  in  1620. 

T.  Coppinger,  Alderman  of  Cork  in 
16 10. 

Creagh  of  Cork  m.  in  1557  a  grand- 
dau.  of  Waters,  who  aided  Perkin 
Warbeck;  he  d.  circ.  1601 ;  his  son 
m.  a  dau.  of  G.  Archdeken ;  he  d. 
in  16 1 4,  leaving  a  son  who  m.  Miss 
Roche  of  Poolnalong  Castle. 

Duggan  of  Mount  Infant,  barony  of 
Duhallow. 

FitzGerald  of  Corkbeg  and  Lisquinlan. 


Smith-Barry  of  Foaty. 

29th  Baron  of  Kinsale. 

A  descendant  of  an  Earl  of  Desmond 
put  to  death  in  Elizabeth's  reign,  is 
said  now  to  be  a  brogue-maker  in 
Kerry. — Dynely's  Tour,  circ.  1689. 
Maternally,  the  Duke  de  Choiseul- 
Praslin,  and  the  Right  Hon.  J.  Fitz- 
gerald, who  d.  in  1835,  aged  93,  were 
descended  from  the  16"1  Earl  of 
Desmond. 

James  Redmond  Barry,  who  claims  to 
be  Viscount  Buttevant. — See  his 
Case  in  House  of  Lords,  1825. 

Barry  of  Leamlara. 


Barry  of  Ballyclough,  who  claims  to 
be  senior  to  the  Barrymore  family. 

The  famous  Edmund  Burke,  and  his 
descendant  Haviland  Burke. 

Coppinger  of  Ballyvolane  and  Barry's 
Court ;  C.  of  Middleton. 

Coppinger  of  Leemount 

Creagh  of  Hermitage,  and  (maternally) 
Brazier-Creagh  of  Creagh  Castle. 


Cronin-Coltsman  of  Glenflesk  Castle 
(paternally). 

(Maternally)  Uniacke  Penrose  Fitz- 
Gerald of  Corkbegg  and  Lisquinlan. 


APPENDIX. 


279 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 

French  of  Cork,  who  d.  165 1,  leaving 
a  bequest  to  the  poor  of  St.  Finn 
Barr's  Church,  which  is  still  paid 
from  property  belonging  to  the 
family. 

Galwey  of  Lota,  descended  from  Gal- 
wey  of  Dundannion  Castle. 

Gould  of  Cork. 

Lysaght  of  Mountnorth,  of  the   Race 

of  O'Brien. 
Mac  Awliffe  of  Castle   Mac   Awliffe, 

near  Newmarket. 


McCarthy  of  Carbry. 
McCarthy     of     Drishane 
Honora  MCS weeny. 


Castle    m. 


Cormac  McCarthy  of  Blarney  Castle, 
Lord  of  Muskerry,  d.  in  16 16. 

Teig-anFhorsa  McCarthy,  Ld-  of  Glean 
an  Chroim. 

Wm.  MacCotter  m.  Miss  Hodnett. 

Meade  of  Ballintobber,  M.P.  for  Cork 
in  1585  ;  his  son,  Sir  John,  m.  a  dau. 
of  Sarsfield,  ist  Viscount  Kilmallock. 

Conogher  O'Callaghan  of  Clonmeen, 
Chief  in  1598,  m.  a  dau.  of  Tirlagh 
McSwiny  ;  his  son's  only  child  Ellen 
m.  O'Callaghan  of  Drumaneen.  The 
last  head  of  this  race,  O'Callaghan 
of  Kilgorey,  who  d.  in  1791,  was 
grandfather  of — 


Donal  I  I  O'Donovan,  40th  Chief  of 
Clancathal  in  1584,  lived  in  the  castle 
of  Rahine,  rebuilt  Castle  Donovan 
in  1628,  as  appears  by  an  inscription 
there.  He  lived  to  the  year  1639  ; 
his  Ist  wife  was  Helena  Barry  of 
Lislee.  By  his  zd  wife,  a  dau.  of 
McCarthy  Reagh,  he  had  7  sons; 
some  say  he  had  1 1  sons. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 
French  of  Cuskinny,  Queenstown. 


Galwey  of  Lota. 

Sir  H.  V.  Gould,  Bart.,  of  Oldcourt ; 

Goold  of  Rosbrien,  Limerick. 
Lord  Lyle  of  Mountnorth. 

Mac  Awliffe,  though  born  to  a  hand- 
some estate,  was  weigh-master  in 
Kenmare  in  1840;  he  was  head  of 
this  clan. — Tribes  of  Ireland,  p.  66. 

Count  McCarthy  of  Toulouse. 

The  late  Alexander  McCarthy,  M.P. 
for  Cork;  McCarthy  O'Leary  of 
Coomlegane. 

McCarthy  of  Carrignavar. 

McCarthy  Duna  of  Cork  ;  McCarthy 
Glas  of  Dunmanway. —  Cronelly. 

Sir  J.  L.  Cotter,  Bart.,  of  Rockforest. 

The  Earl  of  Clanwilliam ;  Meade  of 
Ballintobber;  and  Meade  of  Bally- 
martle. 

Father  O'Reilly,  S.J. ;  the  Earl  of  Ken- 
mare; Mr.  Dease,  M.P.,  and  Major 
Dease.  Theeldestdau.(Mrs.O'Reilly) 
is  erroneously  said,  in  Burke's  ac- 
count of  the  Dease  family,  to  have 
d.  unmar.  See  a  description  of  her 
husband's  tomb,  p.  544  of  Zenihan's 
Hist,  of  Limerick.  Lord  Lismore 
and  O'Callaghan  of  Cadogan  repre- 
sent junior  branches. 

J.  O'Donovan,  the  great  Irish  scholar, 
descended  from  the  eldest  son,  Donal ; 
O'Donovan  of  Montpellier  from  his 
son  Teig  ;  O'D.  of  Cooldurragha,  in 
the  parish  of  Myross,  from  his  son 
Donogh;  Lieutenant  O'D.  of  Cork 
City,  from  Captain  Richard ;  O'D. 
of  Lisheens  House,  and  O'D.  of 
Ardahill,  from  Keudagh. — CfDono- 
vatis  Notes  to  the  Annals. 


280 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  16th  century. 

Diamaid  an-Eich  (of  the  steed)  O'Dono- 
van  of  Gortineeher,  parish  of  Droma- 
league. 

Donal  Oge  Na  Carton  O'Donovan  of 
Cloghatrabally  Castle,  41st  Chief  of 
Clanlochlain  in  1580,  surrendered 
and  received  a  regrant  of  his  pos- 
sessions in  1616  ;  d;  in  1629. 

O'Driscoll  Mor,  Chief  of  Collymore. 


O'Mahony  of  Fonn  Iartarach,   in  the 

South-West  of  Carbery. 
Kean  O'Mahony,  Chief  of  Kinalmeaky, 

with  his  7  sons  removed  to  Kerry. 
O'Sullevan  Mor. 

Murtagh  O'Sullevan  Mor. 

Rory  O'Sullevan  Mor  of  Drominage 
Castle,  m.  Julian  M'Carthy  of 
Drishane. 

O'Sullevan  of  Cappanacus,  from  whose 
house  the  O'Sullevan  Mor  was  elected 
in  case  of  failure  of  the  elder  branch. 

John  Purcell  of  Pullen,  'of  the  Croagh 
line  of  the  Purcells  of  Loughmoe.' 

Roche  of  Castletown. 


Roch  of  Tourin  and  Cregg,  m.  in 
1566  Miss  Fitzgerald  of  Kerry- 
currihy;  he  d.  in  1635  ;  he  had  5 
sons,  George,  Maurice,  David,  John, 
and  Ulick. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 
O'Donovan  of  O'Donovan's  Cove,  in 
West  Carbery. 

—  Donovan,  Esq.,  of  Wood  Street, 
Dublin,  Solicitor;  Donovan  of  Bally- 
nore  and  Clonmore,  Co.  of  Wexford. 
— Appendix  to  Annals,  pp.  2430  to 
2483. 

Wm-  O'Driscoll  (son  of  Denis,  son  of 
Florence),  who  d.  in  1581,  'was  of 
noble  countenance,  and  in  pitch  of 
body  like  a  giant.'  A.  O'Driscoll, 
J. P.,  of  Skibbereen,  of  'boundless 
hospitality,'  d.  in  1849,  'while  in 
gaol  for  debt  to  a  wine  merchant.' 
The  last  known  Chief  was  Conor 
O'Driscoll,  called  'the  Admiral.' — 
O 'Donovan. 

O'Mahony  of  Dunloe  Castle. 

O'Mahony   of    Dromore    Castle,    and 

Castle  Quin. 
O'Sullevan  of  Tomies,  near  Killarney, 

in  the  last  century. 
Sir  E.  Sullevan,  Bart.,  of  St.  Leonards 

House,  Berks. 
Sullivan    of    Curraghmore,    Limerick ; 

Sullivan     of    Wilmington,    Isle    of 

Wight. 
O'Sullevan  of  Prospect,  near  Kenmare, 

who  is  probably  head  of  the  race  of 

O'Sullevan. 
John  Mathew  Purcell,  Esq.,  of  Burton, 

Co.    Cork,    8th    in    descent.—  MS. 

Pedigree  by  General  Creagh. 
Roche   of  Cranagh   Castle,    Co.    Kil- 
kenny; Wm.  Roche,  Esq.,  Solicitor, 

Dublin;  and  (maternally)  Grehan  of 

Clonmeen,  Co.  Cork. 
Roch  of  Woodbine  Hill,  Waterford. 


APPENDIX. 


>Sr 


Families  of  1 6t/i  century. 
Sarsfield  of  Sarsfield  Court. 
Sir  R.  Smith  of  Rathcogan. 

Supple  of  Aghadoe. 


J.  Uniacke,  of  the  Geraldine  family,  d. 

in     1623 ;    was    succeeded    by    his 

cousin,    Uniacke    of    Ballyhubbert, 

from  whom 
Thomas  Uniacke  of  Youghal,  m.  Miss 

Fitzgerald  of  Lisquinlan. 

Wallis  of  Curryglas,  who  d.  in  1630. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/i  century. 

Sarsfield  or  Doughcloyne. 

Smith  of  Headborough,  Waterford,  and 
(maternally)  Moore  of  Ballinatray, 
Waterford. 

Sir  W.  De  Capell-Broke,  Bart,  of  Oak- 
ley, Co.  Northampton,  and  Aghadoe, 
Cork  (paternally). 

Uniacke  of  Mount  Uniacke  ;  Uniacke 
of  Curragheen. 


Uniacke  of  Woodhouse,  Waterford, 
and  Sir  J.  C.  Judkin  Fitzgerald  of 
Lisheen,  Tipperary. 

Wallis  of  Drishane  Castle. 


SETTLERS. 


Aldworth  of  Short  Castle,  near  Mallow, 
father  of  Aldworth,  Vice-President 
of  Munster. 

Beecher. 

Francis  Bernard. 

R.  Boyle,  who  became  '  the  Great 
Earl  of  Cork;'  he  d.  in  1643. 

Cook  settled  before  the  reign  of  Eliza- 
beth, and  Edward  Cook  was  a 
resident  in  Cork  long  before  1641. 

M.  Cox  settled  at  Kilworth. 

Captain  Crofts  came  to  Ireland  in  1596; 

settled  at  Bandon;  his  wife   'placed 

a  cross  to  his  memory  in  the  church 

of  Kilbrogan,  which  is  still  in  a  good 

state  of  preservation.' 
Daunt   of  Gortgrenane   and    Tracton 

Abbey  in  1595. 
Dunscombe  settled  in  Cork  tire.  1566. 
Captain  Fermor. 
Heard  of  Bandon  came  with  Sir  Walter 

Raleigh. 
Arthur  Hyde,  first  settler,  had  a  son, 

Sir  A.  Hyde  of  Carrigonede. 


Aldworth  of  Newmarket. 


Sir  H.  Wrixon  Beecher  of  Ballygiblin 

(maternally). 
The  Earl  of  Bandon. 
The  Earl  of  Cork;  the  Earl  of  Shannon. 

Cook  of  Castle  Cook,  Cork;  Cook  of 

Cordangan  ;  and  Cook  of  Kiltinon 

Castle,  Tipperary. 
Sir  F.  H.  Cox,  Bart.,  of  Dunmanway, 

Co.  Cork. 
Crofts     of    Velvetstown ;     Crofts    of 

Churchtown. 


The  Daunts  of  Gortgrenane,  Fahalea, 

Tracton  Abbey,  and  Kilcaskan. 
Dunscombe  of  Mount  Desert. 
Farmar  of  Dunsinane. 
Heard  of  Pallestown,  Kinsale. 

Hyde  of  Creg,  late  of  Castle  Hyde. 

2   N 


282 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Families  of  16 th  century. 
Elizabeth,  dau.  of  Sir  Thomas  Norreys, 

Lord  President  of  Minister. 
Sir  H.   Power,  general  in    1598,  was 

son  of  Sir  H.  Power,  Master  of  the 

Horse  in  Ireland.     From  his  brother 

descends 
St.  Leger,  President  of  Munster. 
J.  Ware  settled  in  Cork  in  1588. 


Representatives  in  the  igt/1  century. 
Sir  C.  Jephson-Norreys,  Bart.,  Mallow- 
Power  of  Hill  Court,  Hereford. 


Viscount  Doneraile. 
Ware  of  Woodfort. 


Kerry. 


Conor  Mac  Gillicuddy,  'Lord  of  the 

Reeks.' 
Jeffry  O'Connell,  Lord  of  Ballycarbery, 

was  High  Sheriff  of  Kerry ;  he  d.  in 

1635- 
John,  son  of  Conor  O'Conor-Kerry,  of 

Carrigafoyle  Castle. 

Jeffery  O'Donoghue  of  Killagher  and 

Glenflesk,  attainted  in  1603. 
Trant  of  Cahir  Trante,  Dingle. 
Patricin  Mac    Maurice,    17th   Lord  of 
-  Kerry,  b.  in  1541,  d.  in  1600. 
Fitzgerald  of  Rathannan,   '  Knight  of 

Kerry,'   whose   wife  was  a   dau.  of 

O'Sullevan  M6r. 
FitzMaurice  of  Cosfeale  or  Duaghna- 

fealla. 
Hussey  of  Dingle  Castle  or  Daingean- 

ni-Hushy,  Castle  Gregory,  and  Castle 

Minard. 
Rice  of  the  Dingle. 

Captain  Annesley,  Munster  undertaker. 
Sir  T.  Blennerhassett. 

Sir  N.  Browne  of  Rosse,  son  of  first 
settler,  m.  a  dau.  of  O'Sullevan  Beare. 

Chapman,  cousin  of  Sir  W.  Raleigh, 
got  lands  in  Kerry. 

Crosbie,  Protestant  Bishop  of  Ardfert, 
mar.  a  dau.  of  O'Lalor ;  the  Earl  of 
Ormond  wrote  to  Cecil  that  his 
name  was  Mac  Crossan. 


Mac  Gillicuddy  of  the  Reeks. 
O'Connell  of  Darrynane. 


O'Connor-Kerry, 
Lodi   in    184S. — 

O'Donoghue    of 


Daniel     O'Connell 

Commandant    of 

Tribes  of  Ireland. 
The    O'Donoghue ; 

Prover,  Cheshire. 
Trant  of  Dovea,  Tipperary. 
Marquess    of  Landsdowne,   25th  Lord 

of  Kerry  ;  also  the  Earl  of  Orkney. 
'  The  Knight  of  Kerry,'  Valentia. 


FitzMaurice  of  Duagh  House. 
Hussey  of  Dingle. 


Count  Rice  of  the  H.R.  Empire. 

Viscount  Valentia. 

Sir  R.  Blennerhasset,  Bart. ;  and  Blen- 

nerhasset  of  Ballyseedy. 
The  Earl  of  Kenmare. 

Sir  Montague  Chapman,  Bart.,  of  Kil- 
lua  Castle,  Westmeath. 

Sir  E.  W.  Crosbie,  Bart.,  of  Mary- 
borough—seat, Bray,  Co.  Wicklow; 
Crosbie  of  Ballyheige  Castle ;  and 
(maternally)  TalbotCrosbieof  Ardfert. 


APPENDIX. 


283 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Sir  E.  Denny,  undertaker,  of  Tralee. 
Colonel  Gun  settled  early  in  Elizabeth's 

reign. 
Hickson,  Rector  of  Killiney. 
Orpen,  whose  sisters  mar.  O'Donoghue 

of  Ross  and  McCarthy  Mdr. 
Raymond. 


Representatives  in  the  1  gt/i  century. 
Sir  E.  Denny,  Bart.,  of  Tralee  Castle. 
Gun  of  Rattoo ;  Gun  of  Ballybunnion. 

Hickson  of  Fermoyle  House. 
Orpen  of  Killowen. —  Vide  Miss  Hick- 
son's  Kerry  Records. 
Raymond  of  Killmurry. 


Limerick. 


Arthur  of  Limerick. 

Edmond  Bagot  of  Bagotstown  Castle, 

m.  a  dau.  of  Burke  of  Brittas  in  1545; 

he  d.  in  1630. 
Burke  of  Ballinagard,  near  Limerick. 
Burke  of  Ballyvomeen  or  Ballynaguard. 

Burke  of  Castle  Connell  and  Drum- 

sallagh. 
Burke  of  Drumkeen. 


Piers  Creagh  of  Adare,  M.P.   for  the 

city  of  Limerick  in  1639. 
Edmund  Fitzgerald,   'The  Knight  of 

Glin,'  m.  a  dau.  of  McCarthy  Reagh. 
Thomas  Fitzgerald,  Lord  of  Clenglish, 

m.    a   dau.    of  Cormac    M'Dermot 

McCarthy  of   Muskerry ;    he   d.    in 

i635- 
Maurice  Hurley  of  Knocklong  Castle 

m.  Gursell  Hogan,  and  was  father  of 

Sir  Thomas  Hurley. 
J.    Kearney   of  the  Co.    of  Limerick 

settled  at  Garretstown,  Cork,  early 

in  the  17th  century. 
Mahony  Mac  Keogh  of  Cloonclieve  had 

a  son  John  of  Castle  Troy. 
Naish  of  Ballycullen. 
Donogh  O'Grady  of  Kilballyowen,  m. 

a  dau.  of  Browne  of  Camas ;  in  1 6 1 2 

he  settled   his  estates  on  his  sons, 

Darby,  Morogh,  and  Brien. 
Donogh  O'Quin  of  Kilmallock,  whose 

son  mar.  the  heiress  of  O'Riordan. 


Arthur  of  Glanomera,  Co.  Clare. 
Bagot  of  Ballymoe,  Galway ;  Bagot  of 
Kilcoursey,  King's  County. 

Burke  of  Prospect  Villa,  Cork. 
Haviland  Burke  (maternally). 

Sir  R.  De  Burgo,  Bart. ;  and  Burke  of 

Thornfield. 
Hussey   de   Burg  of   Dromkeen    and 

Donore;  Lady  Clonmel,  and  Lady 

Seaton. 
Creagh  of  Dangan,  Co.  Clare. 

FitzGerald,  Knight  of  Glin,  Glin  Castle, 

Co.  Limerick. 
Sir   G.    FitzGerald,    Bart.,    of    Castle 

Ishen,  Cork. 


Conway  Hurly  of  Tralee,  Kerry. 


Cuthbert-Kearney  of  Garretstown,  Cork 
(maternally). 

Keogh  of  Kilbride,  Carlow. 

Naish  of  Ballycullen. 

The  O'Grady  of  Kilballyowen ;  Vis- 
count Guillamore  ;  O'Grady  of  the 
Grange. 

The  Earl  of  Dunraven. 


284 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Families  of  1 6th  century. 
Stephen  Sexten  of  Limerick. 
J.  Evans,  a  settler  in  Limerick. 
E.  Seymour,  whose  son  was  Mayor  of 

Limerick  in  1659. 
Stokes,  an  officer,  whose  son  John  of 

Dummoylan  was  living  in  1622. 


Representatives  in  the  \t)th  century. 
The  Earl  of  Limerick  (maternally). 
Baron  Carbery  of  Cork. 
Seymour  of  Castletown,  Queen's  Co. 

Stokes  of  Mount  Hawk,  Kerry. 


Tipperary. 


The  2d  Lord  Dunboyne  m.  a  dau.  of 
the  Earl  of  Thomond,  and  had  a  son, 
Edward  of  Clare,  Co.  Tipperary. 

Piers  Putler,  3rd  son  of  the  3rd  Baron 
of  Cahir. 

Sir  W.  Butler  of  Kilcashe,  who  became 
11th  Earl  of  Ormond. 

Sir  James  Butler  of  Lismallon,  whose  son 
was  made  Viscount  Ikerrin  in  1629. 

D'Alton  of  Grenanstown. 

Hely  of  Gertrough  ? 

Morres  of  Knockagh,  whose  son  John 
was  made  a  Baronet  in  1632. 

Donal  Connachtach  Mac-I-Brien-Arra. 

Donogh  O'Carroll  of  Buolebrack,  m.  a 
dau.  of  O'Kennedy  of  Ormond. 

Donogh  O'Fogarty  of  Inchy  O'Fogarty, 
Fishmoyne  and  Ballyfogarty. 

Bryan  O'Kearney  of  Knockanglass,  b. 
1534,  d.  1623  ;  his  wife  was  a  dau. 
of  Win.  Butler  of  Ballynadlea;  his 
son  Patrick,  b.  1561,  m.  a  dau.  of 
Teig  Currane  of  Mohearnain. 

O'Mulrian,  Chief  of  Owney. 

Ryan  of  Ballymackeogh. 

Power  of  Barrelstown. 

Prendergast  of  Newcastle-Prendergast. 

John  Stapleton  of  Thurlesbeg,  m.  Sarah 

McEgan. 
Cromwell  Lee  d.  in  Ireland  in  1601. 
Osborne  settled  in  1558. 


The  15th  Baron  of  Dunboyne,  Bally- 
vannon,  Co.  Clare. 

Family  of  the  late  Earl  of  Glengall. 

Marquess  of  Ormonde,  who  is  21st  Earl 
of  Ormonde. 

Earl  of  Carrick,  Mount  Juliet,  Kil- 
kenny. 

Count  D'Alton  of  Grenanstown. 

Earl  of  Donoughmore. 

Viscount  Mountmorres  of  Castle 
Morres,  Kilkenny;  and  Viscount 
Frankfort  de  Montmorency. 

O'Brien  of  Kincora  Lodge,  Killaloe. — 
C  Donovan. 

Father  T-  O'Carroll,  S.J.,  of  Clongowes 
Wood.—  MS.  Pedigree  of  O'Carroll 
of Ardagh. 

Lenigan  of  Castlefogarty  (maternally). 

Kearney  of  Blanchville,  Kilkenny ; 
Kearney  of  Ballinvilla,  Mayo. 


O'Ryan  of  Bansha  House ;  and  Ryan 
of  Inch  are  chief  representatives. 

Ryan  of  Ballymackeogh. 

Sir  R.  Power,  of  Kilfane,  Bart. 

Viscount  Gort  (maternally). 

Sir  F.  Stapleton,  Bart.,  Grey's  Court, 
Oxfordshire. 

Lee  of  Barna,  Tipperary  (?) 

Osborne  of  Newtown-Anner. 


APPENDIX.  285 


THE    CATHOLIC    BISHOPS. 

See  p.   233. 

Armagh. — Edmund  Magauran  (Mag  Shamhraidhiti)  was  Primate  from  1587 
to  1593,  when  he  was  slain  by  the  English  while  hearing  the  confessions  of 
wounded  soldiers.  He  was  succeeded  (1601  to  1625)  by  Dr.  Peter  Lombard, 
who  in  1598  was  sent  to  Rome  as  the  representative  of  the  Universities  of 
Louvain  and  Douay.  Lombard  was  a  man  of  great  genius  and  piety. — See  a 
memoir  of  him,  and  a  list  of  his  works,  by  Dr.  Moran,  Bp.  of  Ossory.  Dr. 
Lombard  was  succeeded  by  the  celebrated  Franciscan,  Dr.  M'Cawel. 

Clogher. — Dr.  McBardill  was  Bp.  in  1592,  and  Dr.  Mathews  or  McMahon 
in  1509. 

Down  and  Connor. — Connor  O'Devany  (O'Duiblieanaigk)  Bp.  from  1582 
to  161 2,  when  he  and  his  chaplain,  Fr.  O'Lughairen,  were  hanged,  drawn,  and 
quartered  in  Dublin.  O'Sullevan  says  he  was  '  omnium  virtutum  ornamento 
fulgens  doctrinam  eruditus,  ingenio  comis  .  .  .'  The  Four  Masters  call  him  a 
'chaste,  wise  divine,  a  perfect  and  truly  meek  man;'  and  they  add  that  no 
prisoner  of  Irish  blood  could  be  got  by  the  promise  of  his  life  to  act  as  execu- 
tioner. The  Bishop's  friend,  Fr.  Hollywood,  S.J.,  says  that  this  '  sanctus 
Antistes,  non  multo  ante  caperetur,  nomina  ad  nos,  diemque  obitus  transmisit 
eorum  Episcoporum,  et  sacerdotum  omnium,  quos,  a  morte  Primatis  Creagh,  in 
hoc  regno  novit  a  Protestantibus  peremptos,  eum  in  finem  ipsorum  uti  res  gestas 
investigaremus  .  .  .' — Fr.  Hollywood's  Letter  to  Fr.  Acquaviva. 

Kilmore. — Richard  Brady,  Bp.  from  T580  to  1607,  'vir  sanctus,'  arrested 
thrice,  once  cruelly  beaten  and  flung  as  dead  into  a  brake  of  briars. 

Dromore. — Patrick  Maccual,  Bp.  from  1576  to — 

Raphoe.— Nial  O'Boyle  (CrBuitlhil)  Bp.  in  1591  ;  imprisoned  in  1598,  d.  in 
1611,  says  Dr.  Brady;  but  the  Annals  give  the  6th  Feb.  1612. 

Derry. — Redmund  O'Gallagher  (O ' Galc/wbliair)  Bp.  from  1569  to  1601, 
when  he  was  slain  by  the  English  in  O'Kane's  country. 

Ardagh. — Rev.  J.  Gafney  was  V.G.  in  1597. 

Dublin. — In  1587  there  was  an  Archbishop,  name  unknown;  in  1600  Dr. 
de  Oviedo  was  Archbp.,  succeeding  'Donald  of  happy  memory.'     Dr.  Mathews 


2  86  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

or  McMahon,  'vir  virtute  et  religione  insignis,'  was  Abp.  from  161 1  to  1623. 
R.  Lalor  was  Vic.  Gen.  of  Dublin,  Kildare,  and  Ferns  from  1594  to  1606. 

Ossory. — Dr.  Strong  Bp.  from  1582  to  1602.  He  remained  in  disguise  in 
Ireland ;  but  at  length  had  to  retire,  and  he  d.  at  Compostella.  His  successor 
was  the  celebrated  David  Rothe  (1618-1650.) 

Kildare. — Dr.  Ribera  of  Toledo,  Bp.  from  1587  to  1605  ;  but,  it  seems,  he 
never  came  to  Ireland.  The  Rev.  J.  Latin  had  extraordinary  powers  from 
Dr.  Lombard  in  161 1. 

Cashel. — Vacant  in  1598;  Dr.  O'Kearney  was  Abp.  from  circ.  1604  to  1624. 
He  was  a  man  of  great  zeal,  and  he  lived  for  years  in  disguise,  and  often  had  to 
hide  in  the  woods,  as  appears  from  his  letters  and  those  of  his  brother,  Bryan 
O'Kearney,  S.J.  He  d.  Aug.  14th,  1624,  in  an  Irish  Monastery  near  Bordeaux. — 
Letter  of  his  nephew,  IF.   Wale,  S.J. 

Cork  and  Clovne. — Dermod  Mac  Craghe,  Bp.  from  15  So  to  circ.  1602. 
O'Sullevan  calls  him  '  Mac  Carrhus,  vir  integerrimus  et  clarissimus  ;  .  .  .  disertus 
atque  sapiens.'  He  professed  Theology  some  years  at  Louvain,  and  was 
remarkable  for  a  prodigious  memory.  He  wrote  an  Irish  catechism.  Fr. 
Purcel,  O.S.F.,  calls  him,  'Graius  vir  valde  prudens  et  in  rebus  agendis  versatus.' 
The  Pacata  Hibcrnia  tells  us  that  in  Nov.  1600  'the  Earle  of  Desmond  and 
Dermond  Mac  Craghe  were  surprised  in  a  poor  ragged  cabbin  in  Drumfinmm 
woods;'  but  escaped.  Carew  wrote  to  Cecil  on  the  18th  of  June  1601 — 'I 
am  promised  for  jQioo  to  gett  Bishoppe  Craghe.'  On  the  24th  April  1604 
Fr.  Holywood,  S.J.,  writes  to  Fr.  Gen.  Acquaviva — 'Hactenus  visum  fait  nostris 
cum  cousilio  Episcopi  Corcagicnsis  piae  fiiemoriee  .  .  .'  This  shows  that  Dr.  Mac 
Craghe  was  dead  before  this  date. 

Ross. — Owen  Mac  Egan,  integerrimae  et  innocentissimae  vitae  sacerdos, 
Doctor  S31-  Theol*-1  Bp.  elect  of  Ross,  was  slain  in  battle  in  1602. — See 
(J  Sulla'an. 

Killaloe. — Conor  O'Mulrian,  Bp.  before  1579,  and  after  16 15. 

Limerick. — Conor  O'Neill,  Bp.  in  1591  ;  he  was  then  in  Spain. 

Tuam. — Marianus  O'Higgin  was  Abp.  circ.  1597.  His  successor  was  the 
celebrated  Dr.  Corny,  O.S.F.  (1608-1629).  whose  epitaph  at  Louvain  says  he 
was  '  pietate,  prudentia,  doctrina  maximus.'  He  wrote  some  works  on  Theology, 
and  an  Irish  book  called  The  Mirror  of  Christian  Life.  His  friendship  for 
Jansenius  carried  him  too  far. 

Achonry. — Owen  O'Hairt,  O.S.D.,  Bp.  from  1562  to  1603,  when  he  d. 
aged  100  years;  he  had  been  among  the  Fathers  of  the  Council  of  Trent  in  1563. 

Clonfert. — Teig  Q'Ferral,  O.S.D.,  Bp.  from   1587  to  1602,  when  he  d.  of 


APPENDIX.  287 

old  age  at  Kinsale,  after  many  years  spent  in  preserving  the  Faith. — See  Rothis 
Processus  Martyrialis. 

Kilmacduagh. — Malachy  O'Molony,  Bp.  from  1570  to  1610.  I  presume  he 
is  the  'Bishop  Muldowny'  in  Connaught,  to  whom  Langton  of  Kilkenny  went 
in  1588  to  get  a  dispensation  to  marry  his  cousin,  Lettice  Daniel. — See  Langton 
Documents  in  Kill;.  Journal  of  Arch. 

These  details  have  been  taken  from  the  works  of  Dr.  O'Renehan,  Dr.  Brady, 
Dr.  Moran,  Dr.  Kelly's  ed.  of  (JSullcvan,  De  Burgo,  and  the  Rev.  J.  C.  Meehan 3 
also  from  Calendar  of  S.  Papers,  and  a  few  contemporary  letters. 


1592,  28  July. — A  memorial  of  sundry  things  commanded  by  her  Majesty  to 
be  well  considered  by  the  Lord  Deputy,  &c.  '.  .  .  Through  the  whole  Realm,  yea 
and  in  the  English  Pale,  there  are  Jesuits  and  seminarie  Priests,  all  labouring 
to  ...  in  many  places  openly  maintained  and  followed,  and  in  some  places — 
namely,  the  English  Pale — secretly  maintained  in  the  houses  of  some  noble 
persons,  and  in  many  gentlemen's  houses  partly  disguised  in  apparel  of  serving- 
men  .  .  .' 

1  st.  In  Ulster  is  one  Redmundus  O'Galligher,  Buisshopp  of  Dayrie,  alias 
Daren,  legate  to  the  Pope  and  Custos  Armaghnensis,  being  one  of  the  three 
Irish  Buishoppes  that  were  in  the  Councill  of  Trent.  This  Buishopp  used  all 
manner  of  spiritual  jurisdiction  throughout  all  Ulster,  consecrating  churches, 
ordaining  priests,  confirming  children,  and  geving  all  manner  of  dispensations, 
ryding  with  pomp  and  company  from  place  to  place,  as  it  was  accustomed  in 
Queen  Mary's  days.  And  for  all  the  rest  of  the  clergy  there,  they  use  all  manner 
of  service  there  now,  as  in  that  time ;  and  not  only  that,  but  they  have  changed 
the  time  according  to  the  Pope's  new  invention. 

The  said  B.  O'Galligher  hath  been  with  divers  Governors  of  that  land  upon 
protection,  and  yet  he  is  suffered  to  enjoy  the  Buishoprick  and  all  the  aforesaid 
aucthorities  these  26  years  past  and  more. 

Likewise  one  Cornelius  McBardill,  Buishop  of  Clogher  these  22  years  past, 
ys  not  yet  reformed,  nor  compelled  to  yield  any  obedience  to  her  Ma,ys  lawes, 
though  he  hath  been  divers  times  before  diverse  governors. 

There  was  one  Rapotensis  Bishop  who  died  three  years  since,  used  the  like 
authority  there  sithens  he  came  from  the  Councill  of  Trent,  being  with  divers 
Governors,  and  never  brought  to  acknowledge  his  duty  to  her  Ma,y- 

In  O'Reilly  his  country,  being  thirty  miles  or  thereabout  from  Dublin,  is 
Richard  Braday,  Buishopp  of  Kilmore,  and  although  there  is  a  kind  of  custodium 
granted  to  a  priest  there  in  her  Majesty's  name,  yet  he  is  in  the  possession,  using 


288  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

all  manner  of  jurisdiction  therein,  although  the  country  is  governed  by  English 
laws  and  officers. 

In  the  same  Ulster  ar  at  the  least  at  this  day,  more  than  16  monasteries 
wherein  are  divers  sorts  of  fryers  and  munks  .  .  :  using  their  habit  and  service 
as  in  Rome  itself  is  used. 

In  Munster  are — 1°  Doctor  Creagh,  B.  of  Cloyne  and  Cork,  who  came  into 
Ireland  in  the  time  of  the  late  Rebellion  of  the  E.  of  Desmond,  being  in  action 
of  rebellion  with  him.  He  is  kept  in  the  country  these  n  or  12  years  past 
without  pardon  or  protection,  and  altho  he  appeare  not  in  any  publicque 
assembly  where  Englishmen  be  present,  yet  he  useth  all  manner  of  spiritual  juris- 
diccions  within  the  whole  province,  being  the  Pope's  Legate,  consecrating 
churches,  making  priests,  confirming  children.  ...  It  is  well  known  that  this 
Creagh  is  one  of  the  most  dangerous  fellowes  that  ever  came  to  this  land,  con- 
tinued there  longest  of  any  of  his  sort,  and  hath  done  more  harm  already  there 
within  these  two  years  than  Dr.  Saunders  did  in  his  time  ...  he  draweth  the 
whole  country  to  disloyalty,  his  credit  is  such. 

There  is  one  James  Karney,  supposed  Bp.  of  Imley,  that  came  over  from 
Rome  last  year. 

There  is  one  Sir  Teig  O'Swyllivan,  an  ernest  Precher  of  Popery,  still  preaching 
from  house  to  house  in  Waterford,  Clonmel,  and  Fethard,  and  in  the  country 
about  these  townes. 

There  is  one  Dr.  Thomas  Rachtor,  born  in  Fethard,  and  lately  come  from  Roome. 

There  is  a  seminary  born  at  Cashel,  named  Wm-  O'Gorhye,  who  came  with  the 
said  Buishop  and  Doctor  the  last  yere. 

There  is  one  J.  O'Clearie,  a  seminarie,  who  came  with  the  foresaid  company 
the  last  yeare,  and  brought  a  dispensation  for  the  town  of  Galway  for  the  killing 
of  the  holy  Spaniarde. 

J.  Buenagh  of  Fethard,  lately  come  from  Rome,  a  seminarie,  dwelling  at 
Fethard  and  thereabouts. 

Sir  Wm-  O'Cherohy,  a  seminarie,  lately  come  from  Rome,  and  now  dwelling 
at  Clonmel,  Cashel,  and  Fithard. 

Sir  Conly  McNi  Marie  an  ernest  precher,  semynarie. 

Morice  Keating,  seminarie,  chapleyn  to  the  said  Dr.  Creagh,  one  of  his 
ordinarie  messengers  to  great  men  when  occasion  requireth. 

Sir  Donogh  Oge  O'Nahane,  one  of  said  Dr.  Creagh's  chapleins. 

Piers  Kelly,  ordained  by  Dr.  Creagh. 

Rory  MfCragh,  very  familiar  with  Dr.  Creagh. 

J.  Morrice,  priest  reconciled  to  Papystry. 


APPENDIX.  289 

R.  Gyanan,  priest,  took  upon  him  the  ministry  once,  now  reconciled  to 
papistry  by  Dr.  Creagh. 

Morice  Ohillane,  priest,  one  of  the  chieftest  mayntainers  Dr.  C.  hath  in  the 
whole  Knight's  country. 

At  Clonmel,  Garret  Reken  and  Sir  Walter.     At  Cahir,  Darby  Calavan. 

At  Cashel,  Patrick  Yonge,  dwelling  always  with  Nicholas  Haly. 

At  Boyton  Rath,  Sir  Dyonis,  priest.     At  Kilternan,  Philip  Stackbolde. 

In  Waterford,  Rich.  Eneas.     At  Loghonoy,  Mat.  O'Dellany. 

At  Kilkenny,  G.  Power,  also  Patrick  Oholen,  dwelling  with  R.  Rothe. 

Sir  Donogh  O'Casshey,  Chancellor  of  Limerick,  according  to  Romish 
institucions. 

Other  priests  are— Rory  O'Fahy,  Thomas  Coherey,  Morice  O'Hownim, 
Richard  Bowdrave. 

Certein  rich  merchaunts  and  good  gent,  within  the  citye  of  Waterford  do 
specially  relieve  and  mainteyne  seminaries  and  massing  priests  :— 

i°  J.  Sherlock,  who  hath  been  Mayor  the  last  yere,  doth  retain  in  his  howse 
one  Dr.  Teig  O'Swillivan,  a  Jesuyt  seminary,  which  priest  hath  divers  times 
preached  publicly  in  the  house  of  one  W™-  Lyncolle  and  other  places  in  the  citye 
and  country,  and  also  in  Clonmell. 

P.  Graunt  Fitzjames  of  Waterford,  merchaunt,  and  Rich.  FitzNicholas  of 
the  same,  merchaunt,  do  retain  by  them  both  one  Sir  David,  priest  of  Kilmallock. 

J.  Leay  FitzNicholas,  P.  White,  R.  Comerford,  and  J.  Browne  fitzHenry  of 
Waterford,  merchaunts,  do  by  them  retain  one  Sir  Morren,  priest. 

Belle  Butler,  wife  unto  T.  Comerford  of  Waterford,  merchaunt,  who  is 
himself  in  Spain  these  12  months,  and  one  J.  Myller,  and  J.  Whyte  FitzWilliam, 
merchaunts,  do  retain  one  Sir  John  White,  priest. 

T.  Porter  and  J.  Miller  of  Waterford,  merchants,  do  retain  in  their  house 
Teig  O'Cane,  priest. 

Richard  Agnes,  priest,  reteyned  by  the  whole  city  in  general,  who  doth  dwell 
in  the  new  building  of  Alexander  Brewers  of  Waterford,  merchaunt,  who  some- 
times professed  religion,  and  now  revolted. 

Thomas  Wadding,  counsellor  att  lawe,  doth  reteine  in  his  howse  one  Kealinge, 
a  priest. 

Richard  Power,  gent.,  is  very  willing  and  able  to  inform  on  such  matters. 

Abridged  from  State  Paper  in  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch,  year  1856,  p.  81  ;  see 

other  Lists  of  Catholic  Clergymen  in  Cat.  of  S.  Papers,  Ireland  (1606-1608);  and 

in  the  Kilkenny  Journal,  Aug.  22,  1874. 

2  o 


CATALOGUS  IBERNORUM  IN  SOCIETATE,   1609. 

{Ex  Archiv.  Soc.  Jesu,  Romae!) 


Provincia. 

Aetas. 

In  Socto- 

Gradu9. 

In  Ibernia. 

P.  Christophorus  Holivodius 

Dublinen. 

5° 

25 

4  vot. 

P.  Thomas  Sheyn 

Clonmell. 

46 

25 

3     » 

P.  Barnabas  Carnaeus 

Cassilien. 

42 

20 

4     » 

P.  Nicolaus  Leynich 

Clonmell. 

43 

23 

3     „ 

P.  Andreas  Mulron 

Clonmell. 

46 

29 

4     ,, 

P.  Patricius  Lenanus 

Medensis 

48 

13 

P.  Walterus  Waleus 

Cassilien. 

35 

13 

P.  Mauritius  Wisaeus 

VVaterforden. 

44 

15 

P.  Jacobus  Everardus 

Fetharden. 

34 

12 

P.  Robertus  Nugentius 

Meden. 

28 

8 

P.  David  Galvaeus 

Corcagen. 

3° 

5 

P.  Joannes  Gerottus 

Dublinen. 

56 

30 

4     „ 

P.  Jacobus  Saulus 

Cassil. 

3° 

2 

P.  Thomas  Kiranus 

Conacen. 

34 

2 

• 

P.  Thomas  Briones 

Kilken. 

27 

5 

P.  Joannes  Barnevallus 

Meden. 

33 

10 

P.  Henricus  Cusacus 

Dublinen. 

26 

4 

P.  Robertus  Bathaeus 

Meden. 

27 

5 

In  Lusitania. 

P.  Cornelius  Rocha 

Toumen. 

40 

10 

P.  Petrus  Nash 

Fetherden. 

1 

Andreas  Nolanus 

Galven. 

24 

9 

Joannes  Morus 

Meden. 

27 

9 

Robertus  Queitrotus      .              ) 

Robertus  Coutinus 

Robertus  Birnus            .             J 

20 

4 

Dublin. 

23 

5 

4 

Gulielmus  Crevaeus 

Cassilien. 

4 

APPENDIX. 


2gi 


Provincia. 

Aetas. 

In  Soctc 

Gradus. 

Lusitania — Continued. 

Joan.  Bapu  Dugin 

Ostrien. 

25 

5 

Michael  Barick 

Rossen. 

24 

3. 

Michael  Cantuel 

Tipperar. 

4 

Gualterus  Lincaeus 

Galven. 

Edoardus  Clams 

Waterforden. 

20 

5 

In  Belgio. 

P.  Thomas  Halaeus 

Kilmaloc. 

30 

4 

P.  Joannes  Birmingamus  . 

Galven. 

36 

2 

P.  Isacus  Briverus 

Waterforden. 

34 

1 

P.  Petrus  Wadingus 

Waterforden. 

26 

8 

P.   Henricus  de  Simone     . 

Dublinen. 

42 

18 

4  vot. 

Michael  Geraldinus 

Dublinen. 

20 

3 

In  Italia. 

Joannes  Lombardus      .             ) 
Thomas  Comefortius     .             J 

Waterfor. 

25 

5 

26 

5 

Odoardus  Barnewallus  . 

Dublin. 

23 

5 

Georgius  Geraldinus 

Meden. 

25 

5 

Robertus  Netervillus     . 

Meden. 

27 

5 

Joannes  Shaeus 

Kilken. 

28 

5 

Gulielmus  Malonus 

Dublin. 

23 

3 

Jacobus  Morganus         .             ) 
Nicolaus  Nugentius       .             j 

Meden 

24 

22 

Bartholomeus  Hamlinus 

Meden. 

20 

Georgius  Galtromus 

Dublin. 

19 

Stephanus  Gouldaeus    . 

Corcagien. 

26 

In  Hispania. 

P.  Jacobus  Archerus 

Kilken. 

64 

36 

4  vot. 

P.  Richardus  Conuaeus     . 

Rossen. 

37 

17 

P.  Thomas  Vitus 

Clonmell. 

52 

15 

Coad. 

Spirit* 

P.  Stephanus  Vitus 

Clonmell. 

34 

13 

P.  Richardus  Valesius 

Waterfor. 

27 

11 

P.  Gulielmus  Bathaeus 

Dublin. 

44 

12 

P.  Stephanus  Mortyns  (qu.  Mortius?) 

Waterfor. 

25 

8 

292 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Provincia. 

Ac  l. is 

In  Socte. 

Gradus. 

Hispania — Continued. 

P.  Gulielmus  Morganus     . 

26 

8 

P.  Jacobus  Valaeus 

27 

9 

P.  Jacobus  Comefortius 

► 

Waterfor. 

26 

9 

Patricius  Sherlocus 

25 

Gulielmus  Vitus 

26 

8 

Michael  Wadingus 

> 

22 

5 

Joannes  Laeus 

Killcen. 

26 

11 

Jacobus  Butlerus 

Rossen. 

3° 

10 

Richardus  Carricus 

Dublin. 

28 

5 

Jacobus  Gripeus,  or  Griphus 

Dublin. 

24 

5 

Coadiutor 

In  Superiore  Germania. 

Ambrosius  Wadingus    .             1 
Laurentius  Laeus          .             / 

Waterf. 

26 

5 

25 

5 

In  Austria. 

P.  Florentius  Morus 

Ultanus 

57 

Coad. 
Spirit" 

In  Gallia. 

P.  Richardus  Datonus 

Kilken. 

3C 

7 

4 

P.  Richardus  Comefortius 

Waterf. 

3° 

5 

4 

In  Paraguaria. 

P.  Thomas  Fildeus 

• 

Limbricenjis 

62 

38 

'Ego,  Talbotus  Gualterus  n.  Dublinii  1562,  patre  Gulielmo  Talboto  viro 
nobili  (adhuc  superstite)  ?  matre  Maria  Bermingham  (in  D"0,  defuncta).' — 10 
Maii  1595. 

'  Batheus  Gul.  Dublinii  n.  1564  a  Joanne,  Judice,  et  Eleonora  Preston.' 
'Barnwall  Joan.  n.  1576  in  Comitatu  Medensi,  a  Roberto  nobili  Domino  de 
Stacallan  et  ab  Alsona  Brendon.' 


APPENDIX. 


29; 


"VVadingus"  Petrus,  Waterfordiensis  .n.  1581  a  Thoma,  et  Maria  Valesia, 
nobilibus. 

'  De  Burgo  Thomas,  Limericensis  n.  1588  a  Thoma,  et  Joanna  Arthur. 

'FitzSimonb  Henricus,  Dublinen.  n.  1566  a  Nicolao,  Armigero  seu  primo- 
genito  Equitis  Aurati,  et  senatore  Dublinensi,  et  Anna  Edgrave '  (qu.  Segrave  ?). 
— Extracts  from  the  Album  of  the  Novitiate  S.J.  of  Toumay,  by  Father 
Morris,  S.J. 

'Carolus  Leae  n.  1545  in  oppido  Cluenensi  Dioecesis  Corcag. ;  pater  erat 
Mauricius  Leae  Doctor  Medicinae,  mater  Maria  Chihi. 

'  Nicholaus  Sedgrave  n.  1538,  Dublinii  a  Jacobo  Sedgrave  qui  exercebat 
mercaturam,  et  Margarita  Bath. 

'Thomas  Phildiusc  n.  1549  Limerici,  Pater  ejus  Gulielmus  Medicinae  callebat, 
Mater  Geneth  Creah,  ambo  nunc  (1574)  mortui. 


a  A  Jesuit,  author  of  several  literary  and 
theological  works  ;  called  in  SotwelVs  Biblio- 
theca,  and  in  Smidl's  Historia  Provincue  Bo- 
hemia:, 'Vir  in  omni  scientiarum  genere 
praestans  ; '  professor  of  poetry,  rhetoric,  and 
metaphysics  at  Louvain  ;  professor  of  theology 
at  Louvain,  Antwerp,  Prague,  and  Gratz  ;  and 
for  thirteen  years  Chancellor  of  two  universities 
at  Prague.  His  brother,  Michael  Wading,  S.J., 
wrote,  besides  other  works,  a  little  book,  on 
which  a  distinguished  professor  of  the  Roman 
College  published  a  commentary  in  two  large 
folio  volumes.  M.  Wading  was  professor  of 
belles-lettres  and  divinity,  and  also  Rector  in 
four  colleges  of  Mexico.  Sketches  of  his 
career  are  given  by  De  la  Reguera,  and  by  the 
Mexican  Diceionario  Universal,  under  the  name 
of  'Godines  oWadingo.'  A  third  brother,  Luke 
Wading,  S.J.,  filled  the  first  chairs  of  divinity 
in  Salamanca,  Valladolid,  and  Madrid  ;  he  is 
called  in  the  Literal  Annua:  of  Toledo,  'Vir 
ingenio  Uteris  eximie  culto,  .  .  .  quemque 
summis  acquiparare  possis  ;  quicquid  doceret 
scientia  et  auctoritate  implebat,  multifarie 
eruditus.'  He  edited  a  posthumous  work  of 
his  cousin,  Paul  Sherlock,  S.J. ,  and  had  some 
works  ready  for  the  press  when  he  died.     Their 


first  cousin,  Ambrose  Wading,  S.J.,  was  elder 
brother  of  the  famous  Franciscan  ;  he  was  pro- 
fessor of  theology  at  Dilingen  University,  and 
superior  of  a  seminary  attached  to  it,  where  he 
governed  150  chosen  young  religious  sent  from 
40  monasteries  of  various  orders  in  Germany. 
Of  him  the  Historia  Provincice  Germanitz 
Sitperioris  says,  '  Cum  juxta  divinis  humanisque 
scientiis  omnibus  excelleret,  longe  tamen  vir- 
tutibus  magis  enituit.' 

b  Fr.  FitzSimon  is  called  in  Wood's  Athena, 
'  A  pillar  of  the  Catholic  Church,  being  es- 
teemed a  great  ornament  among  them,  and  the 
greatest  defender  of  their  religion  of  his  time.' 
See  Quiver's  Collectanea,  and  a  memoir  of  Fr. 
FitzSimon  by  E.  Hogan,  S.J.,  in  the  Irish 
Ecclesiastical  Record. 

c  Fr.  Field  spent  fourteen  years  on  the 
Brazillian  Mission,  and  about  forty  on  the 
Paraguay  Mission,  of  which  he  may  be  con- 
sidered the  father  and  founder.  — See  Cordara's 
Historia  S.y.,  an.  1626;  and  Del  Techo's 
Historia  Paraquaria. 

Of  the  other  Jesuits  named  in  the  catalogue, 
Holiwood,  Carney,  Roche,  Malone,  N.  Nugent, 
R.  Conway,  Stephen  White,  and  W.  Bathe 
wrote  some  works  ;  the  life  of  Stephen  White 


294  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

'Jacobus  Barry  n.  1552  in  Civitate  (Comitatu  ?)  Corcagiensi,  Pater,  Joannes 
Barry,  et  mater  Joanna  Sanaghan  vivebant  de  suis  redditibus  .  .  .  propria 
manu.' — Extracted  from  the  Album  of the  Novitiate  of  St  Andrea,  Rome,  by  the 
Editor  of  this  Book. 


WRITERS  WHO  LIVED  IN  THE  YEAR  1598. 

Laymen. — Walter  Stanihurst,  Michael  FitzSimon,  W.  Quin,  J.  Talbot,  R. 
Stafford,  H.  Burnel,  and  Sir  J.  Ware,  all  of  Dublin.  R.  Barnwall  of  Meath ; 
Connel  McGeoghegan  of  Westmeath  ;  R.  Rothe  of  Kilkenny ;  Ludowick  Barry, 
Captaine  Garret  Barry,  Philip  O'Sullevan  Beare,  and  Fineen  M'Carthy  M or  of 
Cork  (see  supra,  p.  176).  Dermot  O'Meara  of  Tipperary,  and  T.  Russel  of 
Munster  (?)  R.  Bellew  of  Louth  ;  Dr.  Neil  O'Glacan  and  Cucogry  O'Clerigh 
of  Donegal ;  O'Mulconry  of  Roscommon ;  O'Duigenan  of  Leitrim ;  Darcy  of 
Galway,  and  Thadeus  Dun. 

Protestant  Clergymen. — Drs.  Donelan  and  Daniel,  Archbishops  of  Tuam  ;  J. 
Usher,  Abp.  of  Armagh,  and  his  brother,  Ambrose,  of  Trinity  College;  J.  Kerney, 
Treasurer  of  St.  Patrick's,  and  Thady  Dowling  of  Kildare  (was  he  a  Protestant?). 

Catholic  Clergymen. — Dr.  Lombard,  Abp.  of  Armagh  (see  p.  285) ;  Dr. 
O'Devany,  Bp.  of  Down  ;  Dr.  Rothe  of  Ossory,  and  Dr.  Tyrry  of  Cork ;  J.  Cop- 
pinger  of  Cork  ;  Dr.  Keating  and  T.  Carve  of  Tipperary;  J.  Wadding  of  Wexford; 
Dr.  Piers  of  Westmeath;  T.  Messingham  of  Leinster;  R.  Stanihurst  of  Dublin, 
who  after  his  wife's  death  became  a  priest,  and  whose  son  was  author  of  many 
works. 

Religious   of  various    Orders. — H.    Ryan   and    Daniel    O'Daly    (of  Kerry), 


called   '  Polyhister '   on  account  of  his   great  a  great  mathematician,   made  some  improve- 

leaming,    has  been  sketched  by  Dr.    Reeves  ment   in    the    Irish    harp.      Thomas    White 

and  the  Bollandist,  V.  de  Buck.     Hollywood  founded     the    Irish    college    of    Salamanca, 

is  mentioned  with  honour  in  the  history  of  the  James   Archer  was   a   very  remarkable   man. 

University  of  Padua  ;   he  was  professor  of  the-  R.  Netterville  was  beaten  to  death  by  Crom- 

ology  in  some  Continental  colleges,  and  after  well's  soldiers  in  1649;  and  Dominick  O'Collin, 

four  years  in  the  Tower  of  London  he  became  ex-colonel  of  heavy  cavalry  in  the  Wars  of  the 

superior  of  his  brethren  in  Ireland  for  twenty-  League,   ex-captain  of  the  Port  of  Corunna, 

three  years.     W.  Bathe  wrote  a  book  on  'The  who  became  a  Jesuit  lay  brother  in  1598;  was 

Arte  of  Music,'  and  other  works.     R.  Nugent,  hanged  in  Cork  in  the  year  1602. 


APPENDIX.  295 

Dominicans.  O'Daly,  says  Baronius,  became  the  admiration  of  Louvain,  Madrid, 
France,  and  almost  all  Europe.  Wm.  Furlong  of  Wexford,  and  Sebastian 
Shortal  of  Kilkenny,  Cistercians ;  D.  Malone  of  the  order  of  St.  Jerome,  and 
Pursell,  a  monk. 

Order  of  St.  Francis. — Dr.  McCaghwell  of  Down,  Abp.  of  Armagh ;  B. 
O'Hosey,  H.  Chamberlain,  H.  Ward,  and  Michael  O'Clery  (the  chief  of  the 
Four  Masters),  all  of  Ulster;  D.  Mooney  of  Meath  ;  Miles  of  Drogheda  ;  R. 
Rochford  of  Leinster ;  Dr.  Conry,  Archbp.  of  Tuam ;  F.  Mathews  of  Cork  ;  T. 
Strange  and  the  famous  Luke  Wading  of  Waterford  ;  J.  Ferral  of  Munster ;  T. 
Geraldine,  F.  Gray,  M.  Walsh,  A.  Hickey,  and  P.  O'Connor. 

Society  of  Jesus. — Wm.  Bathe,  Christopher  Holywood,  H.  FitzSinipn,  and 
Wm.  Malone  of  Dublin;  R.  Conway  of  New  Ross;  Wm.  St.  Leger  of  Kilkenny; 
N.  Nugent  of  Meath ;  N.  Comerford,  P.  Sherlock,  Peter  Wading,  M.  Wading, 
and  Luke  Wading,  all  of  Waterford;  S.  White  of  Clonmel;  B.  O'Kearney  of 
Cashel;  J.  Young  of  Cashel;  M.  Cantwell  (?)  of  Tipperary;  and  Conor  O'Mahony 
of  Co.  of  Cork;  R.  Fleming,  R.  Rochford,  J.  Houling,  J.  Clare. — See  Ware's 
Writers,  Hibcrnia  Dominicana,  and  Bibliotheque  des  Ecrivains  de  la  Comfagnie 
de  Jesus. 

IRISH   COLLEGES   ANNO    1598. 

1.  The  College  of  Salamanca,  founded  by  Father  Thomas  White,  S.J.,  in  1582; 
opened  in  1592  by  Fathers  White,  Archer,  and  Conway,  S.J. 

2.  Trinity  College,  Dublin,  opened  in  1593. 

3.  Lisbon,  founded  by  Fr.  Houling,  S.J.,  an.  1593. — Historia  Soc.  Jesu. 

4.  Douai,  founded  in  1594  by  Dr.  Cusack,  a  Meath  clergyman. — See  Ware's 
Antiquities,  ed.  by  Dr.  Harris;  Anderson's  Native  Irish,  p.  79;  and  History  of  the 
Irish  Colleges  on  the  Continent,  published  in  the  Irish  Ecclesiastical  Record. 

'From  about  the  yeare  1555,  as  is  well  known,  these  late  heresies  oppressed 
religion  in  our  countrie,  banished  teachers,  extinguished  learning,  exiled  to 
foreign  countries  all  instruction,  and  enforced  our  youth  either  at  home  to  be 
ignorant,  or  abroad  in  povertie  rather  to  glean  eares  of  learning,  than  with  leisure 
to  reap  any  great  abundance  thereof.  Yet  such  as  travelled  to  foreign  countries, 
notwithstanding  all  difficulties,  often  attained  to  singular  perfection  and  repu- 
tation of  learning  in  sundrie  sciences,  to  principal  titles  of  universities,  to  high 
prelacies,  of  whom  some  are  yet  living,  some  departed  in  peace.' — H.  FitzSimon, 
S.J.,  preface  to  his  work,  On  the  Masse. 


296  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


ADDITIONAL  NOTES  ON  ULSTER. 

Louth  (see  p.  3)  stretches  beyond  Meath  and  the  mouth  of  the  Boyne,  with 
a  very  winding  shore  to  the  north ;  has  a  soil  fit  for  pasture,  and  so  rich  as 
readily  to  answer  the  expense  of  cultivation.  Drogheda,  called  by  the  English 
Tredagh,  a  handsome  populous  town. —  Camden.  Killingcoole  Castle  (seep.  4) 
has  had  many  outworks  and  vaults  running  into  one  another,  and  is  said  to 
communicate  with  Castle  Derner,  six  furlongs  off;  Glass  Pistol  Castle  remains 
still.     Castle  Roche  (see  p.  5)  is  a  noble  ruin. — Gough. 

Down  (see  p.  7)  is  an  extensive  and  fertile  country.  Lecale,  a  rich  country, 
and  its  extreme  point  is  called  by  sailors  at  present  St.  John's  Foreland.  Ardes 
(p.  n)  is  a  peninsula,  resembling  a  bended  arm,  being  joined  to  the  rest  of  the 
island  by  a  very  narrow  isthmus,  as  the  arm  to  the  shoulder.  The  soil  is  every- 
where very  kindly,  except  where  in  the  middle,  for  near  twelve  miles  in  length, 
extends  a  wet  and  morassy  level.  The  shore  is  thick  set  with  small  villages. 
Strangford  (p.  12)  is  a  safe  harbour,  where  the  river  Coyn  rushes  with  a  great 
fall  of  water  into  the  sea. — Camden.  Dundrum  Castle  (p.  12)  is  strong  and 
boldly  seated  on  a  rock,  its  ruins  are  of  an  irregular  multangular  figure,  with  a 
fine  round  tower  about  35  feet  diameter  within.  Ardglass  (p.  12)  exhibits  at 
present  a  striking  spectacle  of  its  ancient  strength  and  importance,  being  com- 
posed of  a  number  of  castles  and  a  ruined  church.  But  what  is  most  worthy  of 
attention  is  a  long  range  of  building  in  the  castle  style,  250  feet  in  length,  in 
breadth  only  24  feet ;  the  thickness  of  the  walls  3  feet.  It  was  probably  built 
before  1381,  if  it  be  not  more  ancient. — Gough. 

Antrim  (p.  17),  within  two  miles  of  Ballycastle,  is  a  castle,  and  next  it  an 
ancient  building,  called  the  Abbey,  in  which  is  the  inscription — '  In  Dei  dei- 
paraeque  Virginis  honorem  illustrissimus  ac  noblissimus  dominus  Randolphus 
McDonnell  (p.  17),  comes  de  Antrim  hoc  sacellum  fieri  curavit  An.  Dom.  1612.' 
Dunluce  castle  belonged  to  the  McGuillans,  who  were  dispossessed  of  it  by  the 
McDonnells  in  1580. — Gough. 

Armagh  (p.  19)  is,  as  I  have  been  told  by  the  Earl  of  Devonshire,  Lord 
Deputy,  the  most  fruitful  and  luxuriant  soil  of  all  Ireland ;  so  that  if  any 
manure  be  laid  on  it  to  improve  it,  it  becomes  barren  as  it  were  in  resentment. 

Monaghan  (p.  23)  is  very  mountainous  and  covered  with  woods. — Camden. 


APPENDIX.  297 

Fermanagh  (p.  25). — In  its  centre  is  the  largest  and  most  famous  lake  in 
Ireland,  Lough  Erne,  40  miles  in  extent,  covered  with  thick  woods,  and  full  of 
inhabited  islands,  some  of  them  containing  100,  200,  and  300  acres.  This  lake 
stretches  not  east  and  west,  as  described  in  the  maps,  but  from  south  to  north, 
14  miles  in  length,  and  4  miles  in  breadth ;  it  afterwards  contracts  itself  like  a 
regular  river  for  6  miles ;  on  this  part  of  it  is  Lnis-Killin,  the  principal  fortress  in 
these  parts.  Thence  it  turns  and  spreads  itself  to  the  west,  20  miles  in  length,  and 
10  miles  in  breadth,  as  far  as  Belek,  near  which  is  a  cataract  and  a  most  noble 
salmon-leap. 

Tir-Oen  (p.  25)  is  rough,  fruitful,  and  60  miles  long  and  30  broad,  divided 
by  the  mountains  called  Slieve-Gallen  into  Upper  and  Lower.  In  it  are 
Dunganmn,  the  principal  residence  of  the  Earls,  a  handsomer  house  than  is 
common  in  this  country,  but  has  often  been  fired  by  its  owners  to  prevent  its 
being  burned  by  the  enemy;  also  Ublogahell,  where  O'Neil,  the  haughty  tyrant 
of  Ulster,  used  to  be  crowned  in  the  manner  of  his  country.  Logh  Eaugh 
(p.  25)  is  a  fine  lake,  well  stocked  with  fish;  the  varied  aspect  of  its  banks, 
shady  woods,  meadows  covered  with  perpetual  verdure,  fields  if  well  cultivated 
extremely  fertile,  sloping  hills,  and  the  many  brooks  that  run  into  it — all  con- 
spire to  render  it  most  pleasant  and  profitable.  In  Upper  Tir-Oen  is  the  castle 
of  Sfraban,  a  famous  castle,  inhabited  in  our  time  by  Tirlogh  Leinich  O'Neil, 
and  some  other  castles  of  minor  importance — which,  as  in  other  parts  of  this 
Kingdom,  are  only  high  towers  with  narrow  loopholes  rather  than  windows,  to 
which  adjoin  apartments  of  turf  covered  with  straw,  having  large  courts  sur- 
rounded with  ditches  and  bushes  to  defend  their  cattle  from  robbers.  All  the 
glory  or  reputation  of  this  county  is  derived  from  its  lords,  who  exercise  a  kind 
of  tyrannical  sovereignty,  of  whom  two  were  Earls  of  Tir-Oen,  viz.,  Con  O'Neale 
and  Hugh,  his  son's  son. — Camden. 

Colrane  (p.  28). — 'O'Cahan  had  in  early  life  protected  the  troops  of  Elizabeth 
against  O'Donnell,  had  revolted  from  O'Neill  in  the  height  of  his  rebellion,  and 
made  peace  with  the  English,  had  appeared  against  Tyrone  in  a  suit  of  law ; 
and  by  the  grossest  injustice  he  and  all  dependent  on  him  were  deprived  of  every 
inch  of  land  they  held.'  '  The  County  of  Colrane  is  O'Cahan's  fruitful  country. 
We  had  a  jury  of  Clerke  or  scholars  for  the  jurors,  15  in  number,  of  whom  13 
spake  good  Latin,  and,  that  very  readily.'  They  were — 2  O'Cahans,  3  O'Mullens, 
2  M'Atagarts,  2  McCawells,  McEvally,  O'Heney,  McRedy,  McGillegan, 
McCloskie,  and  O'Heny.—  Ulster  Jour,  of  Arch.,  No.  15,  and  Sir  J.  Davis'  Letter, 
in  No.  16. 

2  p 


298  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO    I  598. 


ADDITIONAL   NOTES    ON    LEINSTER,  &c. 

Dublin  (p.  35)  is  a  good  corn  country,  abounding  in  all  sorts  of  game,  but  so 
bare  of  wood  in  many  parts  that  they  are  forced  to  burn  turf  or  English  pit-coal ; 
it  is  well  stocked  with  towns  and  inhabitants,  surpassing  the  rest  of  Ireland  in 
improvements,  and  in  a  peculiar  neatness.  Where  the  little  river  Bray  falls  into 
the  sea,  a  little  higher  up  one  sees  Ould  Court,  an  estate  of  the  Walshes  of 
Carrickmain,  of  ancient  nobility  and  numerous  in  these  parts.  Dublin  City  is 
defended  with  strong  walls,  adorned  with  beautiful  buildings  and  well  peopled 
with  inhabitants.  From  the  quays  run  very  strong  walls  of  hewn  stone,  defended 
also  on  the  south  with  ramparts,  having  six  gates,  which  open  into  suburbs 
extending  a  great  way  beyond  them.  On  the  west  side  are  two  gates — Ormond 
gate  and  Newgate  (which  last  is  the  public  prison) — leading  to  a  very  long 
suburb  called  St.  Thomas's. — Camden. 

A  True  Description  both  of  the  Citty  and  Citizens  of  Dublin,  by 
Barnaby  Riche,  Gent.,  in  the  Year  16 10. 

He  that  had  no  other  knowledge  of  the  Citty  of  Dublin,  but  as  it  is  described 
by  M.  Stanihurst,  in  his  Chronicle  of  Ireland,  woulde  thinke  it  to  be  far  exceed- 
ing in  Statelinesse  of  building  and  in  many  other  Commodities  more  then  it  is  at 
this  houre,  and  yet  I  am  sure  that  within  these  forty  yeares  that  I  have  knowne 
Dublin,  it  hath  bin  replenished  with  a  thousand  chimnies,  and  beautified  with  as 
many  glasse-windowes,  and  yet  it  maketh  no  such  sumptuous  shew.  But  (saith 
M.  Stanihurst),  It  dooth  exceed  in  gorgeous  buildings,  in  Martial  Chivalrie,  in 
obedience  and  loyaltie,  in  largenesse  of  hospitalitie  and  in  manners  and  civility. 
First,  for  the  gorgeous  buildings  in  Dublin,  there  be  Som  other  Townes  in  Ire- 
land that  do  farre  exceed  it.  And  to  speake  truly,  the  buildings  of  Dublin  are 
neither  outwardly  faire,  nor  inwardly  handsome  :  a  ruynous  kind  of  building, 
neither  convenient  nor  well  cast :  neither  do  I  thinke,  that  either  the  Masons, 
nor  yet  their  Carpenters,  are  of  skill  to  contrive  any  better. 

For  their  Martial  Chivalrie,  I  will  not  disavowe  them,  no  doubt  they  have 
able  men  among  them,  both  of  body  &  mind,  but  I  beleeve  there  are  better 
Souldiers  in  Ireland,  then  any  be  in  Dublin. 

To  speake  the  truth  of  Dubline  as  it  deserveth.     First,  for  the  Towne  it  selfe, 


APPENDIX.  299 

it  is  convenient  enough,  pleasantly  seated,  as  wel  for  the  serenity  of  the  ayre  as 
for  the  pleasing  walks  that  are  round  about  the  Citty. 

The  Cittizens  themselves  are  wonderfully  reformed  in  manners,  in  civility,  in 
curtesy :  themselves  and  their  wives  modest  and  decent  in  their  apparell  (I 
speake  of  the  better  Sort),  and  they  are  tractable  enough  to  any  thing,  Religion 
only  excepted. 

For  their  largenesse  of  Hospitalitie,  I  will  not  deprive  them  of  their  right : 
They  are  bountifull  enough  of  their  meat  and  drinke,  according  to  their  abilities. 
Now  lastly,  for  their  manners  and  civility,  I  confesse,  Dublin  is  very  well  reformed, 
since  M.  Stanihursi  writ  his  Chronicle.  And  now  hee  cometh  againe  to  speake 
of  the  pleasantnesse  of  the  scituation,  and  by  seeming,  he  would  make  it  a  town 
impregnable.  But  I  thinke  M.  Stanihurst  had  little  skil  in  the  Art  of  Fortifi- 
cation. Then  he  describeth  it  with  so  many  Churches,  with  so  many  Chapels, 
with  so  many  streets,  with  so  many  lanes,  with  so  many  Gates,  and  with  so  many 
Bridges,  as  I  protest,  I  having  knowne  Dublin  these  forty  yeares,  yet  know  not 
where  to  finde  the  one  halfe  of  them  he  hath  named  ;  and  a  great  many  of  those 
that  are  to  be  seen,  when  they  are  found,  make  but  a  sory  shew  in  respect  of 
the  Commendation  he  hath  given. 

To  speake  the  truth,  there  are  seuerall  Citizens  of  Dubline  that  are  very 
wealthy  &  men  of  good  ability,  that  haue  there  shoppes  well  replenished  with 
all  sortes  of  wares,  as  wel  Mercery  as  Grocery,  &  Drapery,  both  linnen  & 
woollen,  &  their  is  neither  silk-man  nor  milliner  in  London,  that  can  shew  better 
wares  (for  the  quantitie)  then  some  of  those  do  that  bee  called  Merchantes  of 
Dubline.  But  I  am  now  to  speake  of  a  certaine  kind  of  commodity  that  out- 
stretcheth  all  that  I  have  hitherto  spoken  of,  &  that  is  the  selling  of  Ale  in 
Dubline  a  Quotidian  commodity  that  hath  vent  in  euery  house  in  the  Towne 
euery  day  in  the  weeke,  at  euery  houre  in  the  day,  &  in  euery  minute  in  the 
houre.  There  is  no  Merchandise  so  vendible,  it  is  the  very  marrow  of  the 
common  wealth  in  Dubline  :  the  whole  profit  of  the  Towne  stands  upon  Ale- 
houses, &  selling  of  Ale. — Barnaby  Riches  Description  of  Ireland. 

Carlow  (p.  51)  'is  rich  and  tolerably  wooded.  In  these  parts  live  great 
numbers  of  Cavanaghs,  good  soldiers,  famous  horsemen,  and  still  breathing  the 
spirit  of  their  ancient  nobility  in  their  abject  poverty.  But  as  they  cherish  the 
utmost  inveteracy  against  each  other,  for  I  know  not  what  murders  committed 
on  both  sides  many  years  ago,  they  are  continually  destroying  one  another  with 
mutual  violence  and  assassination.' — Camden. 

Wexford  (p.  56)  is  a  town  of  no  great  size  ;  the  county  abounds  with  English, 
still  retaining  the  old  English  dress  and   idiom,  though  with  a  mixture  of  Irish. 


300  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

Near  Ferns,  on  the  other  side  of  the  Slaney,  live  the  Cavenaghs,  Donells,  Mon- 
taghs,  O' Moors,  Irish  families  of  turbulent  dispositions,  and  among  them  the 
Sinnots,  Roches  and  Peppards,  English  families.  .  .  .  On  this  side  the  Slaney 
the  bulk  of  the  common  people  are  of  English  extraction. —  Camden. 

Cavan  (p.  117). — The  O'Reillys  were,  not  long  since,  particularly  dis- 
tinguished for  their  cavalry. — Camden. 

Galway  (p.  131)  is  at  least  the  third  city  in  Ireland,  being  handsomely  built 
of  hewn  stone  in  a  form  nearly  circular,  and  beautified  with  towers,  frequented 
by  merchants,  who  with  great  ease  and  advantage  supply  it  with  the  various 
riches  of  land  and  sea. —  Camden. 

Maio  (p.  140)  is  a  fruitful  and  pleasant  country,  rich  in  cattle,  deer,  hawks, 
and  honey. —  Camden.  The  castles  in  this  county  are  very  numerous,  and  all 
square,  says  Goug/i,  who  gives  the  names  of  forty-five  and  the  dimensions  of  six 
of  them. 

Lcitrim  (p.  147)  consists  entirely  of  mountains  covered  with  luxuriant  her- 
bage ;  it  feeds  so  many  cattle  that  within  its  narrow  compass  it  counted  at  one 
time  above  120,000  head.  Here  rises  the  Shannon,  that  prince  of  Irish  rivers, 
which  sometimes  narrow,  sometimes  broad,  by  its  various  windings,  washes 
many  counties.  The  principal  families  are  O'Rorck,  O'Murrey,  Mac  Lochleim, 
Mac  Glanchie,  and  Mac  Granell,  all  downright  Irish. — Camden. 

O'Rorke's  castle,  near  Dromahare  castle,  from  what  remains,  appears  to  have 
been  strong  and  spacious,  the  windows  still  in  being  are  high,  narrow  and  dark. 
The  castles  of  Longfield,  Cloncorrisk,  and  Castlebar,  all  of  the  O'Rorkes,  are 
still  to  be  seen.  Dungarbery  castle  seems  to  have  been  of  some  extent ;  it  was 
built  by  Lady  Elizabeth  Clancy  in  the  reign  of  Elizabeth. —  Gough. 

Limerick  (p.  196)  consists  of  two  parts — that  called  the  Upper  one,  in  which 
are  the  cathedral  and  castle,  has  two  gates  with  handsome  stone  bridges  with 
battlements  and  drawbridges,  one  leading  westward,  the  other  leading  eastward, 
to  which  last  adjoins  a  town  walled  round  with  its  castle  and  outworks. —  Camden. 


APPENDIX.  •       3OI 


EVENTS   OF   THE   YEAR    1598. 


I. — '  The  Cessation .' 


On  the  29th  of  October  1597,  the  Earl  of  Ormond,  by  virtue  of  her  Majesty's 
letters,  was  made  Lord  Lieutenant-General  of  the  army,  and  represented  the 
Queen's  '  own  person.'a  On  the  22d  of  December  he  went  to  Dundalk,  received 
O'Neill's  conditional  submission,  and  his  'humble'  petition.  The  Petition 
asks,  '  That  all  the  inhabitants  of  Ireland  may  have  free  liberty  of  conscience, 
or,  at  leastways,  the  benefit  of  her  Majesty's  law  without  being  cumbered  with 
the  law  of  reason.'  '  For  that  the  abuses  of  her  bad  officers  hath  been  the  begin- 
ning of  all  this  trouble,  and  that  the  Irishry  cannot  away  with  the  rigour  of  law 
upon  every  small  occasion,  their  bringing  up  being  but  barbarous,'  that  Tyrone 
may  be  made  a  county  palatine.  That  her  Majesty  withdraw  her  garrison  from 
Tyrone  '  and  all  other  parts  of  the  Irishry.'  As  there  had  passed  an  oath  be- 
tween O'Neill  and  all  the  Irishry  that  took  part  with  him,  that  he  would  take  no 
agreement  for  himself  unless  every  of  them  had  pardon  and  his  predecessors' 
lands — he  craves  that  the  same  may  be  granted,  and  that  the  Mores  and  Connors 
(dispossessed  in  Q.  Mary's  time)  may  have  a  reasonable  portion  of  their  prede- 
cessors' lands. b  This  was  not  a  very  humble  petition  made  '  upon  the  knees  of 
his  heart.'  Mr.  Brewer,  in  his  Introduction  to  Vol.  III.  of  the  Carew  Calendar,'' 
writes,  '  To  Tyrone's  honour  be  it  said,  on  one  point  he  remained  unshaken.  It 
was  required  of  him  that  he  should  not  receive  into  his  country  any  disloyal 
person,  but,  upon  notice  being  given,  send  them  to  the  Governor.'  To  that 
'  he  agreeth,  save  only  that  he  will  not  apprehend  any  spiritual  man,  that  cometh 
into  the  country  for  his  conscience   sake.'     '  In  all  his  conferences  with  the 

a  Car.  Cat.,  pp.  296,  277.  b  Car.  Cat.,  2-ji,.  c  p-  xlv. 


302  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

English  authorities,  and  in  his  correspondence  with  his  countrymen,  liberty  of 
conscience,  and  regard  for  the  Catholic  faith  were  put  foremost  by  Tyrone.' 
Hence,  when  a  Dublin  Jesuit,  Father  FitzSimon,  (a  Palesman  and  no  friend  of 
O'Neill),  was  imprisoned  in  time  of  cessation,  O'Neill  wrote,  '  I  do  feel  myself 
more  grieved,  that  any  should  be  for  his  religion  restrained  in  time  of  cessation 
than  if  there  were  100c  preys  taken  from  me.  Wherefore,  as  ever  you  think 
that  I  shall  enter  to  conclude  peace  or  cessation  with  the  State,  let  him  be 
presently  enlarged."1 

Ormond  on  his  side  proposed — 1°  'abstinence  from  war'  eight  weeks  from  the 
date  hereof ;  Tyrone  '  agreeth,  provided  the  like  be  observed  by  her  Majesty's 
subjects  towards  himself  and  all  in  action  with  him.'  He  agrees  to  call  out  of 
Leinster  as  many  as  were  sent  thither  by  his  direction ;  saving  only,  if  any  do 
stay  contrary  to  his  commandment,  that  they  be  used  no  otherwise  than  as  they 
be  with  whom  they  tarry.  He  is  contented  that  her  Majesty's  subjects  shall  buy 
necessaries  in  Ulster,  so  as  his  men  and  dependants  may  have  like  liberty 
among  her  Highnesses  subjects,  and  he  agrees  that  'the  Ulster  men  shall  not 
come  in  troops  or  great  companies  around,  whereby  to  take  meat  and  drink  of 
her  Majesty's  subjects  by  violence.'  Restitution  to  be  made  of  any  prey  or 
fydragge  taken  out  of  the  Pale  to  the  Fues,  Ferney  or  any  other  part  of  the 
North,  '  the  same  being  trackted  thither ' — the  like  course  to  be  held  for  any 
spoils  taken  from  the  Earl  of  Tyrone  or  his  dependants  by  any  of  the  army  of 
the  Pale — he  agreeth.c 

These  articles  and  O'Neill's  petition  seem  to  have  been  taken  to  England  by 
the  Earl  of  Thomond.  The  Amials  say,  that  '  shortly  before  Christmas  the 
Earls  of  Ormond  and  Thomond  went  into  Ulster,  when  they  and  O'Neill  and 
O'Donnell  passed  three  nights  together  at  one  place  .  .  .  and  a  peace  was  made 
between  the  English  and  Irish  on  the  oath  of  these  Earls  until  May  following. 
The  proposals  .  .  .  were  dispatched  to  the  Queen  by  the  Earl  of  Thomond. 
This  Earl  went  to  England  in  the  beginning  of  January.'f 

'After  the  concluding  of  peace  from  Christmas  to  May  1598,  between  the 
Irish  of  Leathchuinn  and  the  Earl  of  Ormond,  the  Irish  of  the  North  issued 
orders  to  all  the  insurgents  of  JLeinster  and  Meath,  namely,  the  Cavanaghs, 
O'Conors,  O'Mores,  the  Gavel-Rannal  (O'Byrnes),  the  O'Tooles,  Tirrels,  and 
Nugents,  to  desist  for  a  short  time  from  their  acts  of  plunder  and  rebellion— and 
they  did  so  at  the  bidding  of  their  Chiefs.     The  Earl  of  Ormond  permitted  them 

d  Mr.  Brewer's  Introduction   to  Vol.  III.  of  e  Car.  Cal.,  pp.  275,  276. 

Careiv  Calendar,  p.  lvii.  f  Annala. 


APPENDIX.  303 

to  frequent  Leinster,  Meath,  and  the  East  of  Minister,  and  to  eat  and  drink 
with  the  inhabitants)  until  news  should  come  from  England,  in  May,  respecting 
peace  or  war.  By  this  instruction  they  continued  traversing  and  frequenting 
every  country  from  Cill  Maintain  (the  town  of  Wicklow)  to  the  Suir,  and  from 
Loch  Gorman  (Wexford)  to  the  Shannon.  It  was  not  easy  for  the  inhabitants 
of  these  territories  to  bear  their  inordinate  demands  during  this  period.'g 

In  January  the  Lords  Justices  write,  'that  they  find  cause  of  great  distrust  in 
Tyrone,  and  that  he  receiveth  letters  from  the  King  of  Scots;'  in  the  same 
month  Brounker  speaks  of  '  the  lamentable  state  of  this  accursed  country — the 
enemy  is  grown  insolent  and  intolerable ;  in  discipline  and  weapons  he  is  little 
inferior  to  us ;  the  men  of  most  spirit  follow  the  rebels,  and  leave  the  rascals  to 
the  Queen's  service."1 

'The  18th  of  Februarie,  Brian  Oge  Orwarke  (commonly  called  Ororke),  Lord 
of  Letrym,  submitted  himself  in  a  great  assembly  on  his  knees  to  her  Majestie, 
before  Sir  C.  Clifford,  Governor  of  Connaught '  (whom  O'Ruarc  defeated  the 
year  after  in  the  battle  of  the  Curliews,  in  which  Clifford  was  slain. — Editor). 
'  He  and  his  followers  promised  in  all  humblenesse  to  perform  all  duties  to  her 
Majestie.  .  .  .  This  goodly  submission  had  all  the  same  issue  as  followeth  in 
that  of  the  famous  Faith-breaker,  Tyrone."  The  Carew  Calendar  gives 
'  O'Rourke's  fifteen  Demands '  made  on  the  8th  February,  among  which  are — 
'  that  he  may  have  his  country,  both  spiritual  and  temporal,  passed  to  him  and 
his  heirs  by  patent ;  that  a  gaol  be  built  at  Leitrim,  and  a  ward  of  O'Rourke's 
choice  be  maintained  by  the  Queen  to  defend  it ;  that  he  may  have  warrant  to 
confer  with  gentlemen  in  rebellion,  and  that  what  he  promises  in  behalf  of  her 
Majesty  be  performed.     All  this  was  granted.' 

The  Irish  Annals  tell  us  that,  '  O'Rourke  (Brian  Oge,  the  son  of  Brian,  son 
of  Brian  Ballagh,  son  of  Owen)  was  angry  with  O'Donnell  (Hugh'Roe,  the  son 
of  Hugh,  son  of  Manus)  because  of  his  having  plundered  O'Conor  Roe  against 
his  wish,  as  we  have  written  before  ;  and  moreover  he  was  not  at  all  on  terms  of 
peace  with  his  own  brother,  i.e.,  Teige  O'Rourke,  the  son  of  Brian,  son  of  Brian 
Ballagh  (in  consequence  of  a  disagreement)  about  the  partition  of  their  territory 
and  land.  Wherefore  O'Rourke  confederated  and  formed  a  league  of  friendship 
with  the  Governor,  Sir  Conyers  Clifford.  O'Donnell  was  not  pleased  at  hearing 
this  news,  for  the  O'Rourkes  had,  from  a  remote  period,  been  the  friends  of  his 


2  Annala,  pp.  2045  and  2051.  '  Moryson. 

h  Lift  of  McCarthy  Mir,  pp.  165  and  473.  '  Car.  Cal.,  p.  279. 


304  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

tribe,  and  he  (the  present  O'Rourke)  was  his  own  kinsman,  and  he  did  not  wish 
to  make  an  incursion  against  him  or  plunder  his  territory,  as  he  would  treat  all 
others  in  Connaught ;  but  he  felt  certain  that  he  must  needs  plunder  him  unless 
he  should  return  to  the  confederacy  of  the  Irish,  for  he  (O'Donnell)  was  not  at 
peace  with  any  one  who  was  under  the  tutelage  of  the  English.  For  a  certain 
time  he  privately  solicited  him  to  return,  and  at  another  time  he  menaced  and 
threatened  to  plunder  his  territory  unless  he  should  come  back.  O'Rourke  con- 
tinued to  listen  to  those  messages  from  the  beginning  of  Spring  to  the  May 
following,  at  which  time  he  went  to  Athlone  and  delivered  up  his  hostages 
to  the  Governor ;  and  they  made  (mutual)  vows  and  promises  to  be  faithful 
to  each  other;  but  though  the  engagement  was  sincere  (at  the  time),  it  was  not 
long  kept.'k 

'  On  the  15th  of  March,  at  a  meeting  in  Dundalk,  the  Lord  Lieutenant-General 
Ormond  signified  to  Tyrone  that  her  Majesty  had  been  induced  by  his  humble 
submission  to  give  pardon  to  him  and  all  the  Inhabitants  of  Tyrone  upon  con- 
ditions following: — 1,  that  he  renew  his  submission  in  some  publike  place; 
2,  that  he  promise  due  obedience  of  a  subject,  and  not  to  intermeddle  with  the 
Irish,  but  now  leaving  them  to  themselves,  that  they  may  become  humble  suitors 
for  their  own  pardons,  in  which  case  it  is  promised  to  them  also ;  3,  that  he 
disperce  his  forces,  upon  receit  of  his  pardon,  and  dismiss  all  strangers,  Irish, 
Scots,  or  others ;  4,  that  he  renounce  the  name  and  title  of  Oneale;  5,  not  to 
intermeddle  with  her  Maiestie's  wriaghtes  (so  the  Irish  call  the  bordering  lords, 
whom  the  Ulster  Tyrants  have  long  claimed  to  be  their  vassals) ;  6,  that  he 
build  up  again,  at  his  owne  charges,  the  Fort  and  Bridge  of  Blackwater,  and 
furnish  the  soldiers  with  victuals  as  he  formerly  did  ;  7,  that  he  deliver  to  the  L. 
Lieutenant  the  sonnes  of  Shane  Oneale,  who  were  her  Maiestie's  Prisoners  till 
breaking  out  they  fell  into  his  hands,  and  were  imprisoned  by  him  ;  8,  to  declare 
all  intelligence  with  Spaine,  and  leave  it ;  9,  that  he  receive  a  Sheriff  for  Tyrone, 
as  all  other  countries  doe  ;  10,  that  he  put  in  his  eldest  Sonne  for  pledge,  and  at 
all  time  come  to  the  State,  being  called  ;  1  r,  that  he  pay  a  fine  in  part  of  satis- 
faction for  his  offence,  according  to  her  Maiestie's  pleasure  ;  12,  that  he  aid  no 
Rebell,  nor  meddle  with  the  Inhabitants  on  the  east  side  of  the  Ban,  yet  so  as 
he  may  enjoy  any  lands  he  hath  there  ;  r3,  that  he  receive  not  any  disloyal 
person,  but  send  such  to  the  chiefe  governour.' 

'To  the  5th  O'Neill  says — he  desireth  nothing  of  the  wriaghts,  but  such  duties 

k  Annala,  p.  2053. 


APPENDIX.  305 

as  they  yielded  since  his  grandfather's  time.  He  refuseth  the  7th,  because  he 
had  not  those  prisoners  from  the  State.  The  10th  he  refuseth,  for  the  pledges 
(in  particular).  For  the  nth  he  agreeth  to  a  fine  of  500  cowes,  yet  praying  the 
L.  Lieutenant  to  be  a  means  to  her  Maiesty  for  the  remittal  thereof.  To  the 
last  he  agreeth,  provided  that  he  would  deliver  no  man  to  the  State,  who  came 
to  him  for  cause  of  conscience.  .  .  .  Hereupon  at  the  instance  of  the  L. 
Lieutenant  the  Lords  Justices  caused  Tyrone's  pardon  to  be  drawne,  and  sealed 
with  the  great  seale  of  Ireland  bearing  date  the  nth  of  April  1598.' 

'Tyione  received  his  generall  pardon ;  but,  continuing  still  his  disloyal  courses, 
never  pleaded  the  same,  so  as  upon  his  indictment  in  Sept.  1595,  you  shall  find 
him  after  outlawed  in  the  year  1600.'' 

The  truce,  which  lasted  till  the  7th  of  June,  was  violated  only  once,  that  is, 
when  '  James  (the  brother  of  the  Earl  of  Ormond),  the  son  of  Edward,  son  of 
James,  son  of  Pierce  Roe  Butler,  and  the  son  of  Mac  Pierce,  sheriff  of  the  county 
of  Tipperary,  and  many  other  gentlemen,  proceeded  precisely  at  Easter  on  an 
incursion  against  Brian  Reagh  O'More,  a  gentleman  of  the  Irish  party,  who  was 
passing  Easter  in  Ikerrin  ;  but  disaster  and  misfortune  befell  the  assailants,  for 
many  of  their  gentlemen,  of  their  followers,  and  of  their  soldiers,  were  slain,  and 
James,  the  son  of  Edward  Butler,  was  taken  prisoner;  but  Brian  Reagh  delivered 
him  up  in  a  week  afterwards  to  the  Earl  of  Ormond  on  account  of  the  peace  we 
have  mentioned,  and  after  it  had  been  ascertained  that  it  was  not  by  the  per- 
mission of  the  Earl  this  attack  was  made.'™ 

2. — The   War  in   Ulster. 

'An  answer  arrived  from  England  to  the  letters  of  O'Neill,  O'Donnell,  and  the 
other  Irish  chiefs  in  alliance  with  them.  The  Queen  and  the  Council  did  not 
consent  to  grant  them  the  conditions  they  demanded  ;  and  therefore  the  Irish 
exchanged  their  peace  for  war,  their  quietness  for  turmoil,  and  their  tranquillity 
for  dissension  ;  so  that  they  rekindled  the  ancient  flame  of  hatred  in  the  summer 
of  this  year.'" 

So  the  Four  Masters  have  written,  but  Moryson  says  that  O'Neill's  terms 
were  accepted,  yet  that  he  '  wanted  not  pretences  to  frustrate  this  late  treaty.' 
'  The  Irish  Kerne  were  at  the  first  rude  soldiers,  so  as  two  or  three  of  them 
were  employed  to  discharge  one  Peece,  and  hitherto  they  have  subsisted 
especially  by  treacherous  tenders  of  submission  ;  but  now   they  were  growne 

1  Moryson,  p.  23;  Confer  Car.  Cell.,  p.  27S.         "  Annala,  p.  2053. 
m  Annala,  p.  2053. 

2   Q 


306  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

ready  in  managing  their  Peeces,  and  bold  to  skirmish  in  bogges  and  wooddy 
passiges ;  yea,  this  yeare  and  the  next  following  became  so  disasterous  to 
the  English,  and  successful  in  action  to  the  Irish,  as  they  shaked  the  English 
Government  in  this  Kingdome  till  it  tottered,  and  wanted  little  of  fatal 
mine.  Tyrone  wanted  not  pretences  to  frustrate  this  late  treaty,  and  to 
return  to  his  former  disloyalty,  and  the  defection  of  all  other  submitties 
depending  on  him  followed  his  revolt.  First  he  sent  aid  to  Phelim  Mac 
Feogh,  chief  of  the  O'Byrnes,  the  sonne  of  Sir  Feogh  Mac  Hugh  (killed  in 
Sir  W.  Russel's  time),  to  the  end  he  might  make  the  warre  in  Leinster  against 
the  English.'0 

3. — Siege  of  the  Fori  of  Blackwater. 

'  Because  the  English  Fort  of  Blackwater  was  a  great  eyesore  to  him,  lying 
on  the  cheefe  passage  into  his  Countrey,  Tyrone  assembled  all  his  forces  and 
assaulted  the  same.  But  Captaine  Williams  with  his  company  under  him  so 
valiantly  repelled  the  great  multitude  of  assaylants  with  slaughter  of  many  and 
the  most  hardy,  attempting  to  scale  the  fort  (which  was  only  a  deep  trench  or 
wall  of  earth  to  lodge  some  one  hundred  Souldiers)  as  they,  utterly  discouraged 
from  assayling  it,  resolved  to  besiege  it  afarre  off,  and  knowing  they  wanted 
victuals  presumed  to  get  it.'p  Mcyson  speaks  disparagingly  of  this  fort,  which 
is  said  by  O'C/ery,  in  his  life  of  O'Donnell,  to  have  been  'a  strong  earthen  fort, 
with  lighting  towers,  windows,  and  loopholes,  and  a  garrison  of  300  men.' 

The  assault  mentioned  by  Moryson  must  have  taken  place  in  the  year  1597, 
as  we  know  from  Francis  Cosbie  that  the  day  after  it  a  '  Lord  Deputy  drewe 
towards  the  forte  and  made  an  oration  to  the  constable  and  soldiers.'  That  'many 
assaltes'  were  made  'to  surprize '  the  fort  in  1598  is  certain  from  the  letter  of  the 
L.  Justices,  of  July  22d,  and  from  O'Sullevan's  account,  which  I  will  here  insert. 
'  While  O'Neill  was  besieging  Portmore,  O'Donnell,  who  had  come  to  help  him, 
persuaded  him  to  storm  the  place.  Ladders  high  enough  for  the  wall,  and  able 
to  hold  five  men  abreast,  were,  in  spite  of  the  fire  from  the  fort,  placed  against 
the  wall,  but  as  the  English,  foreseeing  the  escalade,  had  deepened  the  trench, 
most  of  the  ladders  were  found  too  short,  and  the  few  men  who  gained  the  top 
of  the  rampart  were  killed  before  they  could  be  supported.  One  hundred  and 
twenty  of  the  assailants  were  slain,  and  among  them  Morogh  Cavanagh,  a 
Leinster  gentleman,  who  had  proved  himself  a  stout  soldier  in  the  battle  fields 
o!  Belgium.*1 

"  Moryson,  p.  ;.i.  "  Moryson.  q  O'Sullevan's  Hist.  Cat!:,  p.   188. 


APPENDIX.  307 

This  can  scarcely  regard  the  assault  of  1597  mentioned  by  the  Four  Masters, 
in  which  30  were  slain,  or  that  described  by  Cosbie,  in  which  over  34  were 
killed.  Cosby  says  that  there  were  in  the  Fort  '  Cap"-  Will'"5-,  with  some  ccc 
soldiers  .  .  .  the  valiantest  men  of  Tiroane's  forces  undertooke  to  wynne  the 
same  .  .  .  gave  a  most  wonderfull  and  bould  assault,  continuing  the  same  very 
long  with  great  resolution,  as  well  in  their  fighte  as  continuallye  supplyinge  of 
fresh  men  in  the  places  of  the  slayne,  hurte,  and  wyckened  ;  and  with  great 
lykelehoode  they  had  wonne  the  same  at  that  instant,  if  they  had  met  with  a 
cravynne  as  they  buckled  w"1  a  man  of  worthe  .  .  .  Cap"  Williams  comforted  his 
soldiers  .  .  .  and  therefore,  said  he,  pull  up  your  hearts ;  for  this  hand  of  myne, 
havinge  a  linstock  therein,  shall  give  fyer  to  this  traigne,  and  both  blowe  youe 
and  myself  up  to  the  skyes  rather  than  that  these  miscreants  shall  enjoy  this 
chardge  of  mine.'  Upon  which  every  man  that  was  able  to  stand  and  hould  a 
weapon  .  .  .  cried  out,  '  We  will  die  with  honor  to  the  last  man.'  The  enemy 
being  advanced  to  the  top  of  the  wall  and  covetinge  by  all  means  to  enter  .  .  . 
the  ditches  were  filled  with  their  dead  corpses ;  yet  stood  they  to  it  right  man- 
fully .  .  .  the  two  field  peeces  charged  with  muscet  shot  paid  them  their  hyre 
both  comynge,  stayinge,  and  retournynge ;  and  glad  they  were  (although  it  is  a 
custome  among  them  to  carry  away  as  many  dead  corpses  and  maimed  men  as  they 
may),  yet  for  all  their  cunninge  they  left  xxxiiii  behind  them  in  the  ditches,  w* 
all  their  ladders,  and  some  furniture  for  a  witness  they  had  come  there ;  but  I 
ensuer  you  that  there  was  a  nomber  slaigne  and  hurte,  that  were  conveyed  away, 
and  very  few  of  the  warde  either  slaigne  or  hurte." 

I  thought  it  right  to  insert  this  description  for  the  honour  of  the  besieged  and 
the  besiegers,  though  it  relates  to  an  assault  immediately  preceding  the  attempts 
'  to  surprize  '  in  T598. 

Sir  G.  Fenton  writes  on  the  nth  of  June — 'The  last  truce  expired  the  7th  of 
this  month,  and  within  2  days  after  Tyrone  made  this  devesion  of  his  forces  ;  one 
parte  he  sent  before  the  Blackwater,  which  he  now  holdeth  invironed,  swearing 
by  his  barbarous  hand  that  he  will  not  departe  till  he  carry  the  forte  ;  another 
parte  he  thrust  into  the  Brenny,  and  at  this  present  assaulteth  the  castle  of  the 
Cavan  there,  promising  not  to  leave  the  place  so  long  as  he  can  gett  a  cow  out 
of  the  English  Pale  to  feed  his  companies.'  The  Lords  Justices  write,  June  17 — 
'  The  forte  is  blocked,  the  garrison  consisteth  upon  4  companies  of  foot.'  Ormond 
writes  to  Cecil,  June  the  18th — '  I  confess  hit  is  no  small  hartgrefe  unto  me  to 
hold  the  place  I   do,  and  to  want  the  meanes  whereby  I  shold  be  inhabled  to 

'  Abridged  from  Cosbie's  Book  on  the  Stale  of  Inland,  Aug.  20,  159S. 


308  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

perform  what  I  most  desier.  I  protest  to  God  the  state  of  the  scurvie 
fort  of  blackwater,  which  cannot  be  longe  held,  doth  more  toche  my  harte 
then  all  the  spoyles  that  ever  were  made  by  traytors  on  mine  owne  landes. 
This  forte  was  always  falling  and  never  victualed,  but  ons  (by  myself),  without 
an  armye.' 

A  spy  gives  this  intelligence  to  Fenton — 'The  13th  day  I  made  an  excuse 
to  goe  into  the  forte,  and  the  Capten  tould  me  all  his  casse  ;  \vch  was  that  he 
wold  keepe  the  forte  yet  this  moneth  ;  wch  he  may  well  doe  ;  for  that  he  hath 
gott  of  late  into  the  forte  17  or  iS  of  therles  mares,  wch  will  serve  him  and  his 
company  a  good  tyme.  He  prayith  yor  Hon'  to  haste  away  the  Queene's  armye 
to  succor  him,  or  else  that  he  may  know  from  you  w'hin  20  daies  whether  he 
shall  make  his  composicion  with  therle  or  not. 

'  Therle  hath  made  great  plashes  betweene  Armagh  and  the  blackwater  ;  and 
there  he  says  he  will  fight  w'h  the  m'sshall  yf  he  come  to  vittell  the  forte.  He 
lyeth  there  stronge  with  as  great  an  armye  as  evr  I  saw  in  the  north,  and  yet  he 
hath  of  late  geven  leave  to  O'Donnell,  McWm',  Maguire,  and  James  McSorley 
to  go  hoame  into  their  countreys,  and  to  be  readie  to  come  agayne  when  he 
shall  send  for  them.' 

The  LLs.  Justices  state,  July  22 — 'The  Forte  is  yet  helde  by  that  valyant 
Gent" ,  Capten  Williams,  who  commanded  it ;  althoughe  Tyrone  have  lately  lent 
his  whole  forces  to  surprize  it,  and  have  lost  many  men  still  about  yt,  who  have 
blocked  them  in  on  all  sydes  of  that  fort ;  yet  .  .  .  that  Captain  hath  lately 
issued  forth,  and,  besides  killing  2  or  3  principal  men,  lie  hath  gotten  divers 
horses  and  garrans  of  Tyrone's  into  the  forte,  which  stande  him  and  the  garrison 
in  good  steade  of  foode.  Tyrone  hath  lyen  before  it  above  a  month,  plashing  of 
passes,  and  digging  deepe  hoales  in  the  Rivers  the  more  to  distress  the  armye 
that  should  come  to  releeve  it,  and  has  used  many  assaltes  to  gett  it.'s 

'  Cap"'  Williams  lying  longe  in  that  unhappye  forte  without  any  reliefe  but 
suche  garrons  and  horses  as  he  by  pollicy  could  attayne  unto  for  the  suffycinge 
of  himself  and  hungry  ward,  acquainted  the  State  with  this  their  woeful  misery  ; 
who,  having  regarde  of  their  distresses,  and  the  safety  of  that  great  bulwarke, 
sent  for  the  Lo.  Lieutenant-Gen'-  to  Dublin  ;  where,  after  debating  what  course 
ivas  to  be  held,  in  the  end  concluded  that  Sir  H.  Bagnall  should  have  the  com- 
mande  of  this  expedicion." 

The  LL.  Justices  write — '  On  the  2d  of  Aug.,  upon  conferment  held  in  coun- 

•  See  these  letters  in  full  in  Kilk.  Jour,  of  '    Francis     Cosbie— See    McCarthy    Mir, 

Arch.,  an.  1857  ;  and  in  McCarthy  Mor.  p.  474. 


APPENDIX.  309 

sell  touching  the  revitlinge  of  Blackwater,  the  Marshal  being  present,  sent  for 
expressly  by  the  L.  Lieutenant,  sora  of  us  were  of  opinion  that  the  hazard  were 
too  great.  .  .  .  But  when  we  saw  his  Lo.  and  the  Marshal  stande  so  much  upon 
the  honor  of  the  service  .  .  .  we  wished  the  L.  Lieutenant  to  undertake  the  matter 
in  person,  as  his  presence  might  drawe  many  of  the  nobilitye  with  their  followers, 
and  might  move  Tyrone  either  from  fear?  or  from  som  other  respects  to  give 
way  to  him.  We  and  the  Lo.  Lieutenant  had  written  to  the  Captain  of  the 
Blackwater  to  consider  how  he  might  make  his  composition  in  tyme  to  the  most 
honour  he  could  for  her  Ma,y  and  best  safety  for  himself;  but  the  Marshal  stayed 
these  letters. 

'  His  Lo.  and  the  Marshall  agreeing  afterwards,  his  Lo.  took  upon  him   the 
matters  of  Leinster,  and  left  to  the  Marshal  the  accion  of  Blackwater."1 

The  LL.  Justices  wrote  a  private  letter,  stating  that  '  it  is  well  knowen  to  all 
this  table,  how  much  against  our  advise  the  same  (jorney  to  the  Blackwater)  was 
undertaken.  When  we  could  not  drawe  his  Lordship  and  the  Marshall  from 
their  purpose  .  .  .  we  urged  muche  that  his  Lp.  would  himselfe  undertake  that 
service.  .  .  .  Yet  his  Lordship,  being  unable  or  unwilling  to  indure  that  troble- 
some  jorney,  answered  us,  that  he  himself  could  not  be  spared  from  the  service 
in  Leinster.'v  These  Justices  must  have  been  bearing  false  witness  against 
Ormond;  for  that  straightforward  and  fearless  man  wrote  to  Cecil — 'Sir,  for  that 
I  understand  that  the  LL.  Justices  wrote  over  to  you,  after  this  disaster,  that  it 
was  not  there  act  to  send  the  Marshal,  but  that  it  was  a  plott  sett  down  between 
him  and  me,  I  have  thoght  goode  for  proofe  of  the  contrary  to  send  you  the 
inclosed  notes,  which  I  pray  you  to  make  known  to  Her  Majestye.'"  Her 
Majesty,  however,  condemned  Ormond,  saying — '  In  the  arrival  of  Sir  R. 
Bingham,  we  knowe  that  you  our  coussin  of  Ormond,  our  Lieutenant,  will 
find  great  ease.  It  being  neither  fitt  nor  possible  that  you  shold  spend  your 
bodye  in  all  services  at  all  times  ;  and  yet  we  must  pleynely  tell  you  that  we  did 
much  dislike  that  you  did  not  attend  the  late  accion  ;  for  yt  were  strange  to  us, 
when  almost  the  whole  force  of  our  kingdom  were  drawn  to  a  hedd,  and  a  mayne 
blow  like  to  be  stroken  for  our  honor  against  the  cappytall  rebell,  that  youe,  whose 
person  wold  have  better  daunted  the  traytor,  and  would  have  carried  with  it 
another  manner  of  reputation,  and  strengthe  of  the  nobilitie  of  the  Kingdome, 
shold  employ  yourself  in  an  accion  of  less  importance,  and  leave  this  to  so  meane 
a  commander.'1 

»  LL.  Justices,  16th  Aug.  "  Ormond,  Sep.  17— See  M'Carthv  Mir. 

T  Loftus  and  Gardener,  Aug.  17.  *  Queen  to  LL.  Justices,  in  Car.  Cal. 


3IO  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

4. — '  The  Jorney  to  the  Blackivater.' 

On  the  2d  of  August,  the  LL.  Jus/ices  write — '  It  may  please  yr  LL's.  to 
understand  that  uppon  consideration  had  of  the  forte  of  Blackwater,  wch  yet  holdeth 
out,  as  we  are  informed,  thoughe  with  great  extremetie,  and  comparinge  likewise 
the  state  of  Leinster  endaungered  in  evry  parte  by  the  rebells  of  the  same  province, 
and  aided  by  forces  from  Tyrone  .  .  .  Sir  H.  Bagnall,  the  Marshall,  is  now  to 
drawe  into  Ulster  with  parte  of  the  armye,  consisting  upon  3500  foote  by  the 
polle,  and  about  300  horse  to  revittle  the  Blackwater;  and  with  another  parte  of 
the  armye,  I,  the  L.  Lieutenant-Gen'-,  w*  such  few  companies  as  remayne,  am 
to  attend  the  prosecution  in  Leinster.  The  day  appointed  for  the  Rendevoues 
for  the  Ulster  armye  is  the  16th  of  this  month,  when  all  the  companies  are  to 
assemble  at  Ardye,  and  from  thence  to  marche  to  the  Xcwrie,  and  so  to  the 
Blackwater  ;  the  successe  and  accydents  of  wch  Jorney  shall  be  advertised  to 
yor  Us.  as  they  shall  fall  out,  wch  we  pray  God  to  prosper  to  Her  Mties-  Honor 
and  the  saffetie  of  the  armye,  onely  we  understand  that  Tyrone  hath  plashed  the 
waies  and  digged  deepe  holes  with  other  trenches  and  fortifications  to  ympeache 
the  armye  between  Armaghe  and  the  Blackwater.'1' 

The  troops  marched  through  Drogheda,  Ardee,  and  Dundalk  ;z  and  on  the 
1 2th  of  August  they  cam  from  the  Newrie,a  and  reached  Armagh  on  the  13th 
without  any  loss  other  than  the  taking  of  Captn  Ratcliff  prisoner,  and  some  4  or 
5  others  cutt  off  in  the  straight  between  Dundalk  and  the  Newrie,  and  who 
straggled  after  the  armye  and  did  not  march  under  the  seffety  thereof.11 

5. — Number  and  Quality  of  the  English  Army. 
The  Armye  numbered  4000  foote  and  upwards,  and  320  horse  by  pole,c  the 
most  choice  companies  of  foote  and  horse  troops  of  the  English  Army,d  and 
the  most  loyal  and  best  tried  in  war  f  but  according  to  the  Irish  account  the 
numbers  were  4500  foot  and  500  horse/  A  state  paper  of  the  time  says  that — 
'In  the  end  of  April  Her  Majesty's  army  in  Ireland  was  certified  to  be  in 
heads' — 


Foote. 

Horse. 

Of  English 

2319 

100 

Of  Pal  erne  n 

1785 

292 

Meere  Irishe 

2478 

129 

English  sent  in  July 

2000 

Total 

8582 

521' 

y  Lords  Justices'  Letter  in  APCarthy  Mir,  p.  477.  ■  Annala.  =>  111  Newse  out  of  Ireland. 
t>  LL.  Justices.  c  Ormond.  d  Moryson  and  Camden.  'Annala.  fO'Sullevan.  eS.  P, 
given  in  McCarthy  Miir,  p.  173. 


APPENDIX.  311 

The  best  of  these  soldiers  were  sent  to  the  north,  and,  to  use  the  words  of 
Queen  Elizabeth,  'almost  the  whole  forces  of  Her  Majesty's  Kingdome  were 
drawen  to  a  head,  and  a  mayne  blowe  like  to  be  stroken  for  her  honor  against 
the  cappytal  rebell."1 

'  Bagnall  was  skilled  in  the  art  of  war,  as  prudent  as  he  was  brave,  cautious  in 
success,  undaunted  in  disaster,  less  contumelious  to  the  conquered  than  most 
Englishmen,  who  are  never  sparing  of  their  insults — he  had  few  equals  and 
fewer  superiors  among  the  generals  of  his  country.  His  army  consisted  of  4500 
foot  under  40  standards  and  as  many  captains,  lieutenants,  ensigns,  and  sergeants 
(tesserarii),  and  of  500  horse  under  8  standards  led  by  Montague.  The  English 
were  all  veterans,  who  had  served  under  General  Sir  John  Norris  in  France,  or 
had  come  from  the  Belgian  fortresses,  or  had  learned  the  soldier's  trade  in  the 
Irish  wars.  The  Irish  of  Bagnal's  army  were  somewhat  more  numerous,  and 
had  often  distinguished  themselves  in  the  service  of  the  Queen.  There  were  with 
him  also  some  young  Irishmen  of  distinction,  such  as  Melmorra  O'Reilly  (called 
the  Handsome  on  account  of  the  rare  beauty  of  his  form  and  face),  and  Chris- 
topher St.  Lawrence,  son  of  Lord  Howth.  All  these  soldiers  were  well  armed  ; 
foot  and  horse  were  furnished  with  breastplates,  the  shot  had  heavy  or  light  guns, 
and  swords,  daggers,  and  helmets;  and  the  whole  host  shone  gaily  in  their 
plumes,  sashes  or  sword-belts,  and  other  military  trappings.  The  brass  cannons 
were  on  wheels  and  drawn  by  horses.  There  was  an  abundant  supply  of  the 
munitions  of  war;  and  horses  and  oxen  carried  plenty  of  bread,  salt  meat,  cheese, 
butter,  and  beer  for  the  army  and  the  fort  of  Portmore — while  a  great  number  of 
drivers,  sutlers,  and  foragers  accompanied  the  baggage.' ' 

6. — 1'iw  Irish  Army — O'NcilVs  Address. 

'When  O'Neill  had  received  intelligence  that  this  great  army  was  approach- 
ing him,  he  sent  his  messengers  to  O'Donnell  requesting  him  to  come  to  his 
assistance  against  this  overwhelming  force  of  foreigners.  O'Donnell  proceeded 
immediately  with  all  his  warriors,  both  infantry  and  cavalry,  and  a  strong  body 
of  forces  from  Connaught  to  the  assistance  of  his  ally.  The  Irish  of  all  the 
province  of  Ulster  joined  the  same  army,  so  that  they  were  all  prepared  to  meet 
the  English  before  they  arrived  at  Armagh.  They  then  dug  deep  trenches  in  the 
common  road  by  which  they  thought  the  English  would  come.'1 

Leaving  some  men  to  keep  the  garrison  in   check,  O'Neill,  on  hearing  of 

h  Words  of  Elizabeth  given  in  a  S.  P.  pub-  !0 'Suttevan,  p.  19. 

lished  in  the  Kilk.  Arch,  ybiirnal.  '  Annate,  p.  2061. 


312  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 

Bagnall's  approach,  marched  to  meet  him,  and  took  up  his  position  a  mile  from 
Portmore,  and  two  miles  from  Armagh.  As  O'Donnell  had  brought  1000  Con- 
naught  men  under  McWilliam,  and  1000  of  his  clansmen  of  Tirconnell,  the 
northern  army  rose  to  the  number  of  4500  foot  and  600  horse  ;  but  it  was  far 
inferior  to  the  English  host  in  equipment,  as  it  consisted  of  light  armed  horse 
and  infantry,  with  the  exception  of  some  heavy  shot  or  musketeers.1' 

According  to  O'Clery's  Life  of  Hugh  O'Donnell,  very  few  of  the  Irish  were 
armed  as  the  English  were,  in  comparison  with  whom  they  were  'naked;'  but 
they  had  enough  of  'spears  and  broad  lances  with  strong  handles  of  ash,  of 
straight,  keen-edged  swords  and  thin  polished  battle-axes,  but  devoid  of  the 
flesca  and  ecclanna  which  distinguished  the  English  battle-axes — they  also  had 
javelins,  bows  and  arrows,  and  guns  with  matchlocks." 

'When  the  chiefs  of  the  North  observed  the  very  great  danger  that  now 
threatened  them,  they  began  to  harangue  their  people  to  acts  of  valour,  saying 
that  unless  the  victory  was  theirs  on  that  day,  no  prospect  remained  for  them 
after  it  but  that  of  being  some  slaughtered  without  mercy,  and  others  cast  into 
prisons  and  wrapped  in  chains,  as  the  Irish  had  been  often  before ;  and  that  such 
as  should  escape  from  that  battle  would  be  expelled  and  banished  into  distant 
foreign  countries  ;  and  they  told  them  moreover,  it  was  easier  for  them  to  defend 
their  patrimony  against  this  foreign  people  (now)  than  to  take  the  patrimony  of 
others  by  force,  after  having  been  expelled  from  their  own  native  country.  This 
exciting  exhortation  of  the  chiefs  made  (the  desired)  impression  upon  their  people; 
and  the  soldiers  declared  that  they  were  ready  to  suffer  death  sooner  than  submit 
to  what  they  feared  would  happen  to  them.'  m 

The  address  given  in  Irish  by  O'Clery  is  thus  translated  by  O'Donovan — 
'  Brave  people,  be  not  dismayed  or  frightened  at  the  English  on  account  of  the 
foreign  appearance  of  their  array  and  the  strangeness  of  their  armour  and  arms, 
the  sound  of  their  trumpets  and  tabours  and  warlike  instruments,  or  their  great 
numbers — for  it  is  absolutely  certain  that  they  shall  be  defeated  in  the  battle  of 
this  day.  Of  this  we  are  indeed  convinced,  for  you  are  on  the  side  of  truth,  and 
they  are  on  the  lie,  fettering  you  in  prisons,  and  beheading  you  in  order  to  rob 
you  of  your  patrimonies.  We  have  indeed  a  very  high  hope  that  this  very  day 
will  distinguish  between  truth,  as  Morann,  the  son  of  Maen,  said  in  the  celebrated 
proverb  :  ni  fuigbitear  breiteain  bus  firiu  catrae — there  has  not  been  found,  there  shall 
not  be  found  a  truer  judge  than  the  battle-field,  as  we  have  heard  from  our  poets, 
who  have  instructed  us  from  a  remote  period. 

kO 'Sulltvan,  p.  191.      Supm,  p.  34.  '  Sec  Aiuiala,  p.  2068,  vole.  m  Annate. 


APPENDIX.  3  i  ^ 

"  Moreover  it  is  easier  to  defend  your  own  patrimony  against  a  race  of  strangers 
than  to  seek  another's  partrimony  after  being  expulsed  from  your  own  native 
country,  which  has  been  in  your  possession  from  the  year  of  the  world  3500  to 
this  very  day." 

'The  gentlemen  and  chieftains  said  that  what  the  princes  had  ultered  was 
true  .  .  .  the  minds  of  the  heroes,  and  the  courage  of  the  common  soldiers 
were  raised,  and  the  Cinel- Council,  Cinel-Owen,  Airghialla,  and  Ui-Ealhach- 
Uladh  were  filled  with  fury,  vigour  and  a  desire  of  plying  their  arms,  by  the 
harangues  of  their  princes  and  true  leaders  ;  and  they  promised  to  them  that 
they  would  not  yield  a  foot,  and  that  they  would  suffer  death  in  that  field  sooner 
than  be  defeated. 

'  There  was  another  cause  for  the  exaltation  of  the  minds  of  the  youthful 
soldiers.  It  was  told  to  them  that  St.  Bearchan,  the  prophet  of  God,  had 
prophesied  that  a  battle  would  be  fought  at  that,  place  against  the  Galls  of  Dublin 
by  a  Hugh  O'Neill  and  by  the  province  in  general,  for  he  had  promised  that 
the  inhabitants  of  Ulster  would  come  to  his  relief,  and  the  Cinel-Connell  in 
particular.  The  heroes  believed  that  the  prophet  of  God  would  not  tell  a  lie. 
The  person  who  first  exhibited  this  prophecy  was  a  certain  famous  poet  of  the 
faithful  people  of  O'Donnell,  who  accompanied  O'Donnell  on  this  expedition,  to 
excite  and  encourage  him.  His  name  was  Fearfasa  O'Clery.  He  asked  what 
was  the  name  of  that  place,  and,  being  told  it,  he  said  that  St.  Bearchan  had 
predicted  a  defeat  of  foreigners  by  a  Hugh  O'Neill,  and  that  he  had  for  a  long 
time  a  recollection  of  the  prophecy,  which  the  true  saint  had  delivered  ;  and  he 
proceeded  to  harangue  the  heroes,  as  was  proper  for  one  like  him,  and  he  said, 
reciting  the  words  of  St.  Bearchan  : 

A  ccath  an  Atha-buidhe 
As  lais  tuitfe  na  danaii 
Iar  ndithughadh  allmuireach 
Bidh  faoilidh  fir  o  Thoraigh. 

In  the  fight  of  Yellow-Ford 
By  him  shall  be  slain  the  Danair  (barbarians)  ; 
After  the  cutting  off  of  the  foreigners, 
Shall  rejoice  the  men  from  Tory.'n 

7. — Marshal  Bagnair s  Address  to  his  Soldiers. 
Bagnal  delivered  an  address  to  his  soldiers  before  setting  out  from  Armagh. 
I  give  the  substance  of  it  from  O'Sullevan — '  Soldiers  !  I  have  selected  you  for 
this  enterprise,  leaving  the  raw  recruits  to  the  my  Lord  of  Ormond.     We  shall 

"  Annala,  p.  206S,  note. 

2  R 


314  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

this  day  avenge  the  disasters  of  General  Morris  and  Lord  Borough  ;  the  naked 
rebels  will  run  away  the  moment  they  will  see  our  armed  and  veteran  warriors, 
and  we  shall  secure  all  Ulster  and  a  vast  amount  of  spoils.  Remember  the 
valour  you  displayed,  under  my  leadership,  in  relieving  Armagh  and  driving 
O'Neill  from  his  camp  at  Mullach-Ban.  Whoever  shall  bring  me  this  evening 
the  head  of  O'Neill  or  O'Donnell  shall  receive  one  thousand  pounds,  and  you 
all  according  to  your  services  shall  receive  thanks  and  rewards  from  your  General 
and  your  Queen.     Let  us  march  on  to  victory.'" 

8. —  The  March  from  Armagh. 
On  Mondaie  the  14th  of  August,  the  Armie  marched  from  Ardmagh,  leving 
there  all  the  victualls  and  some  munitionp,  the  drink,  women,  and  young  persons, 
horses,  baggage,  servants,  and  rabbleq.  They  started  before  sunrise'.  It  was 
concluded  by  the  Counsell  the  day  before,  that  the  syxe  regiments  shoulde 
marche  in  single  bodies,  till  such  time  as  they  sawe  each  other  engaged,  and 
then  joyne  in  three  bodies  for  eache  others'  releife  if  they  found  the  grounde 
answerable8,  and  turn  out  their  wings,  should  they  see  cause'.  Captains  Lee 
and  Turner  were  commanded  with  a  partie  of  men  to  lead  the  forelorne  hope". 
Colonel  Percye  having  the  Vanguard,  theMarshal  his  second,  should  both  join 
and  make  one  vanguard.  Colonel  Cosbie  having  the  vanguard  of  the  battle, 
Sir  Thomas  Maria  Wingfield  his  second,  were  appointed  the  like.  Colonel 
Cunie,  then  Sergeant  Mayor  having  the  vanguard  of  the  rear,  Colonel  Billings 
his  second,  were  appointed  the  like.  The  Marshal,  in  respect  that  his  regiment 
had  the  vanguard,  would  go  there,  notwithstanding  that  he  was  advised  by 
Wingfield  to  come  into  the  battle  and  leave  the  vanguard  to  him  ;  the  like  did 
Cunie,  but  neither  could  persuade  him.  The  battle  was  commanded  by  Wing- 
field, the  rear  by  Cunie.  The  horse  were  divided  into  three  bodies  ;  the  van- 
guard led  by  Sir  Callisthines  Brooke,  General  of  the  horse  ;  the  point  by  Capt. 
Montague,  Lieutenant  General ;  the  rear  by  Capt  Fleming,  marching  betwixt  the 
two  rear  regiments'.  They  marched  severally,  sum  six  or  700  paces  between 
each  regiment",  so  far  asonder  as  one  of  them  could  not  second  nor  help 
thother"  ;  for  when  the  vanguard  was  charged  they  were  within  sight  of  our  battel, 
and  yet  not  rescued  till  they  were  overthrown7.  Suer  the  devill  bewiched  them 
that  none  of  them  did  prevent  this  gross  error,  whereof  Ormond  had  warned  the 
Marshal  to  take  especiall  carez. 

•  O'Sullci'an,  p.  192.  i>  Montague.         q  Annala.         '  O '  Sullevan.       s  Colonel  Byllinges. 

'  Order  given  tn  the  Armye  as  well  for  their  marching  as  in  fighting. — Car  Cal.         n  Colonel 
Byllinges.         v Car.  Cal.         "Mont.igue.         'Ormond.         >'Taaffe.         'Ormond. 


APPENDIX.  315 

g.—Th*  '  Skirmish^ 
The  day  was  bright  and  serene,  the  sun  was  glancing  on  the  corselets  and 
spears  of  the  glittering  cavalry,  their  banners  waved  proudly,  and  their  bugles 
rang  clear  in  the  morning  air,  when  suddenly,  about  seven  o'clock,  from  the 
thickets  on  both  sides  of  their  path  a  volley  of  musketry  swept  through  their 
foremost  ranks".  The  waye  being  harde  and  hillie  ground  within  calliver  shotte 
of  wood  and  bogge  on  both  sides,  which  was  whollie  possessed  by  [500  beard- 
less kernea  of]  thennemy  continuelly  playing  upon  us,  the  army  was  fought 
withal  within  half  a  mile  of  Armaghb,  in  the  pace  and  thick  woods  beyond  it  on 
the  eastsidec,  and  on  the  right  hand  side  of  the  common  highway  in  wich  my 
Lo.  Borough  passed  to  the  Blackwaterd  ;  and  the  skirmishe  was  maintained  on 
all  sides  up  to  the  trenches,  being  two  miles  from  Ardmarglv5.  Bagnall,  on  ac- 
count of  the  thickets,  was  unable  to  return  the  fire  of  these  skirmishers  or  to 
charge  them  with  cavalry ;  and  he,  with  difficulty,  brought  his  troops  through 
into  a  large  plain,  that  stretched  up  to  the  Irish  entrenchments.  Here  his 
horsemen  pursued  the  sharpshooters  ;  but  were  rolled  over  by  the  holes,  which 
O'Neill  had  got  made,  and  concealed  with  brambles  and  grass,  while  those  who 
came  to  their  assistance  had  to  contend  with  the  Irish  light  troops.  Having  got  to 
safer  ground,  he  sent  out  skirmishers  and  heavy  shot,  who  were  encountered  by 
fresh  troops  of  his  enemy.  His  heavy  cavalry  armed  with  breastplates,  and  bear- 
ing lances  six  cubits  long,  which  rested  on  their  right  thigh,  were  again  and  again 
charged  by  the  Irish  light  horse,  who  threw  at  them  darts  three  cubits  long,  and 
carried  lances  more  than  six  cubits  in  length,  which  they  used  only  when  sure  of 
their  blow,  and,  when  using,  held  poised  by  the  middle  over  their  right  shoulders. 
Bagnal's  progress  was  often  arrested  by  these  light  troops  ;  yet  at  eleven  o'clock 
he  reached  a  spot  not  far  from  the  Irish  camp,  where  his  way  was  flanked  by  bogs 
and  stopped  by  a  ditch  four  feet  highf. 

10. — The  Vanguard  attacks  the  Trench. 

After  a  myles  marching  thus  ('  played  on  '  by  the  Irish)  we  approached 
thennemystrentch,8  being  a  ditche  caste  infronteof  our  passage,  amylelonge,  som 
five  footte  deepe,  and  four  footte  over  with  a  thorn  ey  hedge  on  the  toppe  ;  in  the 
middell  of  a  bog  som  forty  paces  over  our  vanguard  passed  the  trentchh,  having 
crossed  over  the  ford  at  the  first  bog,  where  the  saker  was  left  without  stay,  and 

"  O'Sul/evan.         b  Car.  Cat.  p.  2go,   and  Kingsmill.  c  Moryson.  d  Taaffe.         e  The 

two  Kingsmills.         '  O'Sullnan.  s  Now  a  drain  crossing  Anaka,  at  the   foot   of  a  hill  on 

which  there  is  a  '  sconce. '     See  p.  316,  and  note  11.  h  Montague. 


3  l6  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

so  forward'.  The  forelorne  hope,  led  by  Captains  Lee  and  Turnor  '  the  great,' 
and  the  vanguard  possesst  the  trenche,  and  passed  forward  to  a  skons  made 
upon  the  top  of  the  hill  beyond  the  same  ;  where  they  remayned  a  pretty  while, 
and  skirmish  being  hotlie  entertained  upon  our  reare,  thennemy  on  horse  and 
foote  chardg  our  companies  and  bett  them  back  to  the  trench  again,  where  they 
were  for  the  most  parte  all  slaine,  and  their  severall  collors  taken  by  thennemyej. 
The  vanguard  was  so  distressed  as  they  fell  to  runne,  and  were  all  in  effect  putt 
to  the  sworde  without  resistance1*.  To  this  question,  what  was  the  reason  the 
vanguard  was  not  seconded,  beeing  possessed  of  the  trenches  ?  Capt.  George 
Kinsmell,  who  was  in  the  poynte  saieth,  that  the  Marshal's  regiment,  who  was  to 
second  the  poynte  (Percy's  regiment),  was  in  distance  so  far  of,  and  hotly  fought 
withal,  that  they  cold  by  no  means  com  up  to  second  them,  whereby  the  whole 
regiment  was  defeated,  and  all  the  captains  slayne,  Colonel  Piercy  and  Capt. 
George  Kingsmell  only  excepted,  who  by  a  stand  made  by  the  horsse  recovered 
their  second.  What  did  the  broken  regiment,  when  you  came  to  the  second  ? 
Capt.  Ceorge  Kingsmell  saieth,  they  joined  with  the  marshal's  regiment  their 
seconds,  and  put  themselves  in  order,  and  charged  agayne  to  the  trenches,  which 
they  won  the  second  time  and,  for  want  of  seconding  by  the  Battayle,  was 
defeated  as  the  first.  This  onset  of  the  Irish  is  thus  described  by  O'Clery  and 
the  four  masters.  The  English  advanced  vigorously  until  they  sailled  across 
the  first  broad,  deep  trench,  and  some  of  them  were  killed  in  crossing  it.  The 
Irish  army  then  poured  upon  them  vehemently  and  boldly,  furiously  and  im- 
petuously, shouting  in  the  rear  and  in  the  van,  and  on  either  side  of  them. 
The  van  was  obliged  to  avoid  the  onset,  bide  the  brunt  of  the  conflict,  and 
withstand  the  firing,  so  that  their  close  lines  were  thinned,  their  gentlemen 
gapped,  and  their  heroes  subdued™.  As  the  English  shots  reached  farther  than 
the  Irish,  the  Irish  adopted  this  plan ;  they  scattered  themselves  around  the 
English  on  all  sides,  closed  in  on  them,  and  fought  at  close  quarters  with  the 
Barbarians,  drove  in  their  shot  and  skirmishers  from  the  flanks  to  the  centre,  and 
forced  the  battalions  in  armour  to  move  to  the  flanks,  and  thus  by  their  fire,  and 
by  the  firm  and  compact  order  in  which  they  were  arrayed  by  their  leaders,  they 
retarded  the  English  advance,  and  finally  rolled  back  their  vanguard  when  it 
reached  the  broad  deep  ditches  in  the  plain  of  Belanahabuy". 

'  Car.  Cal. — The  saker  was  a  large  cannon. 

"  The  cannon,  blunderbuss,  and  saker. 

He  was  ih'  inventor  of,  and  maker." — Hudibras. 
' Lieut. -Taaffe.  k Montagu.  'Declaration  of  Captains  Ferdinando  Kingsmyl  and 

George  Kingsmill.  m  Annala.  n  O' deary's  Life  of  O'Donnell,  M.S.  R.  I.  Academy. 

The  Ordnance  Survey  officers  have  mistaken  the  site  of  this  battlefield. 


APPENDIX.  -  317 

1 1. — The  Fighting  of  the  Battayle,  or  2nd  Brigade. 

What  was  the  reason  the  Battayle  came  not  up  ?  They  say  that  the  saker 
being  bogged,  staied  the  Battayle  so  longe  and  thennemies  gathered  soe  about 
them  in  such  multitudes  as  they  cold  not  boothe  second  the  vangard  and  save 
the  ordinance.  Yet  Cosbie,  having  the  vauntgard  of  the  Battayle,  passed  the 
bog  and  left  the  saker".  Wingfield  coming  thither  made  there  a  stand  as  well  to 
carry  off  the  saker  [which  stuck  fast  in  a  forde0],  as  to  attend  the  coming  up  of 
the  rear  regiments,  whom  he  doubted  to  be  greatly  engaged,  for  that  he  heard 
them  in  great  fights,  and  had  no  sight  of  them  a  long  time  before,  by  reason  of  a 
hill  betwixt  them.  Of  this  he  went  to  acquaint  the  Marshal,  thinking  to  find 
the  vanguard  but  a  little  before  him,  which  could  not  then  be  seen  by  reason  of 
the  hill,  purposing  to  have  it  to  make  good  that  place,  and  that  himself  would  go 
with  the  battle  to  fetch  off  the  rear  ;  but  it  was  so  far  off  as  the  Marshal  sent  to 
them  to  make  good  their  retreat  to  that  hill  where  he  stood,  and  returned  with 
Wingfield  to  the  saker,  which  he  then  brought  off  by  force  of  men,  and  went 
again  with  the  Marshal,  thinking  that  the  vanguard  had  been  come  up,  which 
was  still  advancing  forward,  and  in  all  this  time  there  was  no  sight  of  the  rearV 
The  Marshal  coming  from  the  rear  of  the  armye,*  when  the  van  was  beaten 
back,  charged  down  with  the  battle,**  and  our  horses  which  ivere  in  the 
vantguard  ;  and  in  going  down  [having  raised  his  visor***]  he  was  slayne  with  a 
shott  through  his  forrhead ;  after  whose  death,  we  that  were  on  horseback  found 
no  goinge  where  the  rebells  stood,  by  reason  of  a  mayne  bogge'  Tyrone,  pricked 
forward  with  rage  and  envy  of  settled  rancour  against  the  Marshal,  assayled  the 
English  first  line,  and  turning  his  full  force  against  the  Marshal's  person,  had  the 
success  to  kill  him,  valiantly  fighting  among  the  thickest  of  the  rebels.5  And  as 
an  army  deprived  of  its  leader  does  not  generally  maintain  the  battlefield,  the 
General's  people  were  finally  routed  by  dint  of  conflict  and  fighting  across 
the  earthen  pits  and  broad,  deep  trenches,  over  which  they  had  previously 
passed — they  were  slaughtered,  mangled,  mutilated,  and  cut  to  pieces.' 

At  which  time  the  Marshal  was  slain,  the  vanguard,  either  having  received  a 
message  to  make  a  retreat,  or  overlaid  with  the  multitude  of  the  enemy,  wheeled 
about  disorderly,  which  advantage  the  enemy  took  and  brake  them.  Captain 
Evans  was  shot.  Much  of  our  powther  took  fire,  wherewith  many  of  our  men 
were  slain  or  hurt,  and  the  rear  of  the  battle  disranked  and  routed" ;  these  two  or 
three  barrels  or  fyrckens  of  powther  spoiled  many  men  and  disordered  others, 

"The  Kingsmills.        p  Montague.         q  Car.  Cat.,  p.  280.     Wingfield's  account  probably. 

*  recte  from  the  Battayl,  E.  H.      **  Qu.  the  poynte  or  his  own  regiment?       ***  O'Sulleran. 

'  Taaffe.         s  Moryson,         '  Annala.  "  Car.  Cat.  and  Montague. 


3  I  8  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

and  withall  our  great'speece  did  us  much  hurte,  staying  our  marche  at  every  1 2 
score  endev.  After  this  explosion,  the  ground  was  enveloped  in  a  dense,  black, 
gloomy  mass  of  smoke  for  a  considerable  part  of  the  day".  The  Rere  of  the 
Battayle  mayntained  fight  for  the  saker,  which  cold  not  be  recovered  by  reason 
yt  was  bogged,  and  the  oxen  killed  that  drew  it",  and  the  wheele  brokeny;  upon 
which  accident  and  the  former  defeatment  the  Sergeant  Major  and  Montague 
came  to  Wingfield,  chief  commander,  the  Marshal  being  dedd,  and  they  deter- 
mined to  retreat  to  Armagh  ;  Cosby  however,  without  orders,  made  an  attack  on 
the  enemy,  and  he  was  fetched  off  broken  like  the  rest*.  He  advanced  with  his 
Regiment  for  the  saffegard  of  those  that  were  broken,  with  whom  he  joining,  and 
the  Rere  of  the  Battayle  remaining  with  the  saker,  for  want  of  seconding  his 
regiment  was  lost  with  the  rest  of  the  vauntguard,  and  Cosby  himself  taken 
prisoner*. 

Cosby's  charge  is  perhaps  that  referred  to  thus  by  Taaffe,  Montague  and 
O'Sullivan  in  the  following  terms — After  the  Marshal's  death,  we  that  were  on 
horssback  found  no  going  where  the  rebells  stood,  by  reason  of  a  main  bogg, 
and  neverthelesse  our  battel  of  foote  went  thither,  where  they  lost  the  most  part 
of  their  shott,  and  four  captains,  and  came  by  force  of  the  enemy  agayneb. 
Notwithstanding  the  general's  death  2  other  regiments'  passed  over  the  trentch  ; 
the  Battayle  coming  upp,  two  barills  of  powther  took  fire  amongst  them  by 
which  they  disranked,  in  the  whieh  whyle  those  2  former  regiments,  being  passed 
the  trentch,  were  for  the  most  part  putt  to  the  sworde ;  then  by  the  helpe  of  our 
horse,  the  enemies  municion  being  well  spente,  we  brought  the  rest  into  the 
plain  and  so  recovered  Armaghed.  At  the  time  of  Cosby's  attack  O'Neill  seems 
to  have  been  in  some  danger.  He  had  to  cope  with  the  regiments  of  Percy, 
Bagnal,  Cosby  and  Wingfield,  and  the  horse  of  Brooke  and  Montague,  while 
O'Donnell,  McGuire  and  M'Farley  grappled  with  the  foote  of  Cuiny  and 
Billings,  and  Fleming's  horse.  He  was  on  horseback  beside  his  troops,  with  a 
guard  of  forty  horse  and  forty  shot.  He  ordered  his  shot  to  fire  on  the  ap- 
proaching English,  and,  having  thus  created  some  confusion  in  their  ranks,  he 
charged  with  his  forty  troopers,  while  his  pikemen  advanced  with  a  loud  cheer, 
and  drove  the  English  back  in  disorder  about  one  o'clock  in  the  day.  O'Donnell's 
opponents,  seeing  their  comrades  routed,  broke  and  rane.  O'Donnell's  oppo- 
nents were  the  rear  guard,  commanded  by  Cuiney  and  Billings,  and  sup 
ported  by  Fleming's  cavalry.     Here  is  an  account  of  their  fighting. 

*  Ormond,  Taaffe.  and  the  Billinges.  w  Annala,  and  O'Sullevan,  *  Billings. 

y  Taaffe.  '  Car.  Cal.  and  Billings.  a  Billinges.  b  Taaffl: 

c  i.  e.  Bagnal's  and  Cosbys.  ■  Montague.  e  O'Sullevan. 


APPENDIX.  319 

1 2. —  The  Rear  '  in  Great  Fight.' 
Wingfield,  being  come  to  his  own  regiment  (from  beside  the  Marshal),  saw 
the  rear  coming  up,  for  whom  he  made  a  stand  at  the  boggy  ford,  and  went  to 
tell  the  Marshal  of  their  coming,  at  which  time  he  was  slainf.  The  vann  of  the 
Reare,  Cuyny,  being  Sarjint  Major,  had;  and  the  rear  of  all  had  Byllinge's. 
So  the  other  regiments  marching,  the  Sarjint  Major's  regiment  and  the  Reare 
marched  in  one  bodye  to  the  forde,  and  at  the  forde  the  Sarjent  Major's 
regiment  took  the  vann  of  the  Reare,  being  his  place.  The  rear  noe  sooner 
recovered  the  hill  beyond  the  forde  towards  the  Blackwater,  but  the  enemy 
charged  us  with  horse  and  foofe  to  the  nomber  of  2000  foote  and  400 
horse.*  Having  long  entertained  skyrmishe,  and  by  reason  of  the  great 
nomber  of  the  enemy's  shott  and  horse  coming  so  near  and  faste  upon  us,  we 
were  forced  four  or  fyve  severall  tymes  to  charge  with  our  coullors  in  the  heade 
of  the  fight,  by  reason  our  shott  was  so  beaten  and  our  new  men  bringing  the 
rest  into  confusion^.  Capt.  Ferdinando  Kingsmell,  who  was  in  Cuyny's  Regi- 
ment in  the  vantguard  of  the  Rere,  saieth  that  they  were  so  hotely  fought  withal 
by  the  force  of  O'Donnell,  Magwyre,  and  James  McSorley  theire  horse  and  foote, 
that  in  an  houre  and  a  halfe  they  could  not  marche  a  quarter  of  a  myle  forward, 
by  which  means  they  never  understood  in  the  rere  of  the  Killinge  of  the  Mar- 
shal nor  of  the  defeating  of  the  former  Regiments,  until  they  came  upp  to  fetch 
oft"  the  Battayle,  with  whom  theyjoinedh.  Being  thus  in  fight,  our  Regiment 
could  not  gain  a  butt's  length  in  three  quarters  of  an  hourr  The  which  the 
horsemen  of  the  Rere  and  the  Sarjent  Major's  Regiment  canne  witnesse,  who  came 
to  second  us  which  the  enemy  seeing  quitted  us'.  Here  was  likewise  fired  in 
the  Rere  2  barrels  of  poulder  to  the  great  hurte  and  dismay  of  the  Enemy,  as 
appeared  by  their  cry  at  the  sight  thereof.  When  the  enemy  quytted  us, 
both  regiments  made  tow115  the  Bogge,  where  being  near  upon  the  entrance  of 
the  Boogge  the  Sarjent  Maior's  Regiment  drue  of  the  right  hand,  and  the 
Reare  directly  over  the  Boogge k. 

13.— The  Retreat. 
Being  no  soner  come  over  but  the  Sargent  Maior  gave  Byllinges  dyrection 
to  retreate,  and  make  good  the  forde.  And  in  our  Retreate  we  garded  the 
dead  bodye  of  the  Marshal,  and  Sir  Calystynes  Brookes  being  hurte,  and  most  of 
the  hurte  men,  besides  the  three  peeces  of  ordynance,  and  the  remainder  of  the 
munycion.     So  being  come  near  the  forde  we  saw  the  enemye,  both  horse  and 

1  Car.  Cat.  *  An  exaggeration,  clearly.  g  The  Captains  of  Kingsmill's  Regiment. 

h  Cap.  F.  Kingsmill.      '  Captains  of  Billing's  Regiment.       '  The  Kingsmills.  Billings. 


320  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   1  598. 

foote,  with  the  collours  flying,  which  were  taken  from  the  Vanguard  of  all, 
mynding  to  make  good  the  Forde  before  us.  Then  we  first  having  attayned 
the  forde  made  it  goode.  Then  Smythe,  one  of  the  corporalls  of  the  feilde, 
came  to  Billinges,  in  the  hearing  of  Cap"'  Hawes,  with  direction  to  make  good 
a  hill  betwixt  Armagh  and  the  forde  tyll  such  tyme  as  the  rest  came  upp.  The 
which  was  performed ;  and  in  our  retreate  towds  the  hill,  the  enemy's  horse 
coming  to  cutt  betwixt  us  and  Armagh,  we  shott  off  the  biggest  of  the  three 
peeces  of  ordynance,  which  made  thenemy  to  stande.  So  leving  these  our 
knowledgments  for  that  dayes'  service  under  our  handes,  to  which  we  will  be 
sworne,  and  pawne  our  lyves  ;  commending  the  same  to  yor  Lordship's  judg- 
ments to  sensure  according  to  our  desartes '.  This  statement  of  Byllings,  Hawes 
and  Feteplace  can  scarcely  be  reconciled  with  that  of  Montague,  Lieutenant 
General  of  the  horse,  that  the  "  R  ere  stood,  which,  being  hard  sett  to,  retired 
foully  to  Armagh"1."  The  new  men  sent  over  for  supplies,  never  offered  to  fight, 
but,  as  their  leaders  say,  ranne  away  most  cowardlie,  castinge  from  them  their 
armour  and  weapon  as  soon  as  they  were  charged  ;  few  or  none  of  them  brought 
backe  their  amies".  By  the  reporte  of  all  the  officers,  there  ran  away  to  the 
Irish  no  less  than  300  of  the  meere  Irish,  being  Ulster  and  Connaught  men, 
and  two  Englishmen  of  the  new  supplies,  who  the  next  morning  called  to  their 
fellows,  and  told  them  the  Erie  would  give  them  20s  a  peece  for  ymprest,  if 
they  would  serve  him;  and  for  all  the  rest  of  the  new  supplies  we  think  the 
better  half  of  them  is  lost,  for  many  of  them  were  slayne  without  making 
any  resistance".  Those  soldiers  that  survived  shamefully  laid  all  the  blame, 
not  on  their  own  cowardice,  but,  as  was  usual  in  such  cases,  on  the  unskil- 
fulness  of  their  officers".  However  Mr  Moylmoora  Reylie  in  presens  of  many 
tryed  his  loyalty  and  valure;  and  so,  God  save  me,  did  the  rest  of  the 
captains,  as  much  as  might  be  donn  in  so  ill  grounde,  being  wood  and  bogge 
on  either  side  of  the  marche  unto  the  trencheq.  This  O'Reilly,  sumamed 
"The  Handsome,"  by  word  and  example  strove  to  rally  the  fugitives,  and 
gathered  some  soldiers  around  him,  chiefly  men  of  his  own  blood ;  but  they, 
being  unsupported,  were  soon  cut  down,  and  O'Reilly,  left  alone,  fell,  fighting  to 
the  last'.  In  one  spot  specially  the  carnage  was  terrible,  and  the  country 
people  yet  point  out  the  lane  where  that  hideous  rout  passed  by,  and  call  it  to 
this  day  The  Bloody  Loaning. 

The  Colonel  and  Captains  of  Bylling's  Regiment;  i.e. ,  Byllings,   Hawes,  and    Feteplace. 
m  Montague.  "  Ormond.  °  The  Kingsmills.  p  Camden. 

"  Taaffe.  '  0' SulUiv.  1  ■  '  MdJtcl,     .  . 


APPENDIX. 


321 


14. — Killed  and  Wounded. 
The  Irish  obtained  a  great  victor}' ;  I  term  it  great,  says  Moryson,  since  the 
English,  from  their  first  arrival  in  that  kingdom,  never  had  received  such  an 
overthrou  as  this,  commonly  called  the  Defeat  of  Blackwater;  thirteen  valiant 
Captaines,  and  1500  common  souldiers,  (whereof  many  were  of  the  old  com- 
panies, which  had  served  in  Brittany  under  General  Norreys)  were  slaine  in  the 
field'.  As  the  estimates  of  the  English  losses  vary,  I  submit  a  tabular  view  of 
them. 


English  Losses. — 

( Compiled  from 

the  State  Papers 

etc.) 

Captains  slain — 
20  or  23. 

Lieutenants  slain 
— 9- 

Ensigne  Colours 
Lost — 12. 

Voluntarie  Gen- 
tlemen slayne — 4. 

Captains  slain. 

Marshal  Bagnal 

Bagnal's 

Bagnal's 

M.  Brooke 

24 — O'Sullivan 

Banke 

Constable 

23 — O'Duigenan 

Bethel" 

Harrington 

21 — Lombard 

Bourke" 

SirG.  Bourchier's 

Poule 

19 — Annala 

Brooks 

Lord  Delvin's 

16 — English 

Elsden 

Elsden's 

Writers 

Evans 

Evans' 

Soldiers  slain. 

Fortescu  v 

Eustace's 

2  700 — Lombard 

Foskew  ' 

Foskew's 

2500 — O'Sullivan  and  Annala 

Harvey 

2000 — Montague,    and      "111 

Hawes™ 

News,"  and  The  King- 

Henserve" 

Mills 

Henshawe" 

not  less  than  1800 — Montague 

Hushie 

F.  Kingsmill's 

1 700 — O'Duigenan 

Langhton 

Sir  H.  Norrey's 

Langhton's 

1500 — Moryson  & 

Leigh 

Leigh's 

Leigh's 

Camden 

Morgan 

Lieu'  Massey 

Morgan's 

over  1000 — Taafe 

O'Reilly 

Col.  Percy's 

Colonel  Percy's 

855slayne(363Hurte)-S.Paper 

Pettitt 

Parker's 

Pettitt's 

Other   Losses. 

Radcliffe 

1200  gold  crowns — Lombard 

Romney 

All  the  baggage,  all  the  drums, 

Streete 

Street's 

34   colours,   the    Cannon,   a 

Turnor 

Tumor's 

quantity  of  arms — O'Sullivan 

The  first  account  of  the  battle  runs  thus  : — 

*'  1598,  Aus  14.  The  111  Newse  out  oflreland  :  the  12th  of  August  they  cam 
from  the  Newry  to  Armaghe  ;  the  14th  of  August  theye  sete  forwardes  towardes 
the  Blackewaterwith  4000  footemenand  350  horses.  Capt.  Percy  and  Cap.  Cosbey 
led  the  firste  regiment  of  foote  being  2000 ;    Cap.  Percy  was  hurte,   Cosbey 


'  Moryson  and  Camden. 
same  name. 


u  Prisoners,  says  Taaffe. 
Anthony  Hawes  escaped. 


'  Perhaps  different  spelling  of  the 
Perhaps  the  same  person. 
2    S 


322  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO    I  598. 

slaine,  and  almoste  all  the  regimente  slayne.  Sir  H.  Bagnall  ledd  the  second 
regiment  being  of  1000,  he  was  shott  in  the  hedd,  slayne,  and  most  of  the  regi- 
mente. Sir  Calistianes  Brooke  led  the  horses,  being  350,  was  shott  into  the 
belly,  and  thought  to  be  slayne.  About  2000  footemen  slayne,  and  Cap.  Cosbey, 
Cap.  Evans,  Cap.  Morgan,  Cap.  Turner,  Cap.  Leighe,  Cap.  Streete,  Cap 
Elsden,  Cap.  Banke,  Cap.  Petty,  Cap.  Henserve,  Cap.  Bethel,  Cap.  Fortescue, 
Cap.  Harvey,  Cap.  Molmarey  Orrely,  Cap.  Bourke.  Wra  Bule  Commesarey  a 
voluntarey  slayne,  James  Harrington  soone  to  Sir  H.  Harrington,  Maximilean 
Brooke  taken  or  slayne,  Mr  Connstable  a  Vollintarey  gentleman  slayne"." 

Lieutenant  Taafe,  who  with  Montague  and  the  cavalry  escaped  from  Armagh, 
writes,  two  days  after  the  battle — 

'We  lost  18  captains,  and  seeing  there  are  soe  many  lost  I  thought  fitt  to 
pray  you  to  be  a  mean  to  my  L.  Lieutenant  that  I  may  have  one  of  their 
chardges,  asshuring  myself  that  very  few  will  be  sutors  for  the  lyke.  The 
greatest  in  nombers  of  their  soldiers  that  escaped  is  not  12  men  to  any  one 
company.2 

The  victory  cost  the  Ulstermen  less  than  200  men  killed  and  more  than  600 
wounded4;  according  to  the  English  account  the  Irish  lost  i2ob  or  300'  or  7ocd 
men,  and  among  them  2  sons  of  Art  McBaron,  2  sons  of  O'Cahan,  2  leaders, 
Maguire's  son,  the  son  of  McKennagh  of  the  Trough,  and  the  son  of  Donell 
McSorley's  son.e 

15. — The  Siege  0/  Armagh. 

By  the  help  of  our  horse,  thenemies  municion  being  well  spente,  we  brought 
off  the  armye  into  the  plaine  and  soe  recovered  Armaghe,  where  the  capteins 
resolved  to  refreshe  their  men  with  victualls  and  municion,  and  soe  to  marche 
dyrectlie  to  the  Newrie.  In  the  meane  tyme  thenemies  approached  and  fell 
round  on  all  all  sides  of  us  with  their  whole  force.  The  capteins  seeing 
thinsufficiencie  both  in  mind  and  means  of  ther  men,  and  finding  themselves  noe 
way  able  to  returne,  resolved  that  I  [Cap.  Montague]  wold  adventure  with  all 
the  horse  in  the  night  to  break  through  them,  and  soe  if  I  cold  to  passe  to  the 
Newrie,  then  they  had  shuch  a  preportion  of  vittualls  as  wold  kepe  them  viii 
dayeg.  In  which  tyme  they  hope  yor  Lo  (i.e.  Ormond)  will  make  some  speedy 
expedition  to  fetch  them  off,  or  ells  O'Donnell  and  McGuoire  being  also  in  want 
of  victualls  wold  returne  hoame,  and  then  they  would  see,  if  they  could  pass 
away  in  one  night  to  the  Newrie  ;  or  ells  thenemie  seeinge  the  horse  gone  might 
be  persuaded  that  they  having  a  monethe  or  2  victualls,  which  indeed  was  there 

"  Kill;.  J.  of  Arch.  '  Taaffe.  a  O'Sullcian.  b  Whitechurch. 

c    Taaffe.  d  Montague.  '  Whihchurch  and  Taafft. 


APPENDIX.  323 

but  dispossed  upon  their  first  resolution,  soe  as  they  made  account  they 
had  not  now  left  meatt  for  above  ten  daies  at  the  uttermoste,  that  thenemy 
cold  not  kepe  together,  hearinge  by  a  prisoner  that  was  taken  that  O'Donnell  and 
McGwier  was  then  reddy  to  departe,  I  thought  my  lyfe  well  adventured  to  save 
so  many,  attempted  it,  and  cam  away  with  sum  vii  score  horse  with  som  very 
little  loss,  though  they  continually  followed  me,  and  at  my  passing  out  of  the 
campe  gave  me  a  great  volley  of  shott.  They  have  veray  small  store  of  muni- 
cion,  and  ther  Irish  run  continually  to  the  rebells.  I  much  feare  they  will 
betray  them ;  for  I  was  no  sooner  gone,  but  I  might  here  them  in  very  hot 
skirmishe  in  the  quarters,  There  remains  of  ours  about  2500  in  the  church  of 
Armaghe'. 

Montague  did  not  escape  so  easily,  it  appears,  for  O'Sullivan  says,  that 
Tirlogh  O'Hanlon  with  part  of  O'Neill's  horse  pursued  him,  killed  three  of  his 
officers,  and  captured  200  horses;  he  adds  that  Captain  Romley  was  slain  the 
next  day  while  smoking  a  pipe  by  the  road  side.s  The  besieged  and  besiegers 
continued  to  fire  at  each  other  for  three  days  and  three  nights,  and  then  the 
English  ceased,  and  sent  messengers  to  say  that  they  would  surrender  the  fort  [at 
the  Blackwater],  if  the  warders  were  suffered  to  come  to  them,  without  wounding 
or  danger,  to  Armagh ;  and  that  on  their  arrival  they  would  leave  Armagh  itself, 
if  they  were  granted  quarter  and  protection  and  escorted  in  safety  into  a  secure 
territory.  The  Irish  held  a  council,  and  some  of  them  said  the  English  should 
not  be  permitted  to  come  out  of  their  straitened  position  until  they  should  all  be 
killed  or  starved  together h.  The  LL.  Justices  on  the  16th  Aug.,  wrote  to 
O'Neill  in  '  favour  of  those  distressed  companies  who  remayne  in  the  church  there 
away  ting  for  soch  comfort  as  men  in  so  great  calamity  may  expect.'  They  say — 
'  We  thought  good  upon  this  occasion  to  send  to  you  in  their  behalfe,  thoughe 
wee  think  that  in  your  owne  consideration  you  will  let  them  departe  without 
doing  them  any  further  hurte.  We  are  to  putt  you  in  minde  how  farr  you  may 
incense  her  Maties  indignation  towarde  you,  if  you  shall  do  any  further  distresse 
to  those  companies,  beinge  as  you  know  in  cold  bludd  .  .  .  Besides  your 
anncient  adversarye,  the  Marshall,  being  now  taken  away,  we  hope  you  will 
cease  all  further  revenge  towards  the  rest.  .  .  .' 

These  Justices,  who  heard  the  news  only  at  9  o'clock  on  the  16th,  wrote  to 
the  Privy  Council  '  that  the  Irish  know  as  well  as  ourselves  that  we  are  not  hable 
without  presente  succor  out  of  England,  to  fetch  off  these  companies  cooped  up 
in  the  church  of  Armagh.' 

Therle  offered  composition  uppon  these  condicions — First,  that  we  shold  quit 

1  Montague's  Reporte,  and  his  Litter  to  Ormonde,  B  O '  Sullevan. 

h  Sic.  Annala,  translated  by  O'Donova 


324  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

the  Blackwater,  leving  there  the  collors,  drumms  and  municion,  the  Cap1"  having 
left  them  onely  their  Rapiers  and  hacknies ;  and,  that  beeing  delivered,  the  whole 
army  with  those  men  of  the  Blackwater  shold  marche  away  from  Armagh  with 
all  their  carriage  and  hurte  men  to  the  Newrie  or  Dondalk,  for  performance 
whereof  pledges  were  putt  in  on  both  sides.  For  the  Army  the  2  cap"5  Ferdinand 
and  George  Kingsmell,  and  on  Tirone's  parte  two  of  the  Hagans  the  men  of 
most  estimacion  in  this  country,  which  of  each  part  was  accordingly  performed. 
Being  pledges  for  the  performance  of  the  conditions  Thearle  gave  [us]  for  the 
reason  that  he  offered  the  composition,  that  he  was  at  ^500  charge  by  the  daye 
in  keping  his  forces  together  to  attend  our  Army  ;  and  that  he  supposed  we  had 
a  moneth  or  six  weeks  victuall,  in  which  tyme  he  knew,  as  he  said,  that  forces 
would  lande  in  Loghfoyle,  and  therefore  he  thought  it  better  to  save  that  charge, 
to  gayne  the  forte  of  the  Blackwater,  and  to  bend  himself  to  hinder  the  landing 
of  our  forces  in  Loghfoyle,  then  by  lyinge  by  us,  with  soe  great  charge  to  hazard 
so  many  inconveniences  as  he  feared  he  might  otherwise  fall  into — Ferdinando 
Kingsmill,  George  Kingsmill.'  The  Annala  tells  us  that  one  of  the  conditions 
was,  '  that  the  English  should  not  carry  out  of  the  fort  meat  or  drink,  armour, 
arms  or  ordnance,  powder  or  lead,  or  anything  except  only  the  captain's  trunk 
and  arms,  which  he  was  at  liberty  to  take  with  him.  They  consented  on  both 
sides  to  abide  by  those  conditions  ;  and  they  sent  some  of  their  gentlemen  of 
both  sides  to  the  fort  [of  Blackwater]  to  converse  with  the  warders.k  The  yielding 
of  the  fort  followed,  when  the  assaulted  guard  saw  no  Hope  of  Relief,  but  espe- 
cially upon  messages  sent  to  Captain  Williams  from  our  broken  forces  retired  to 
Armagh,  professing  that  all  their  safety  depended  upon  his  yielding  the  fort  into 
the  hands  of  Tyrone,  without  which  danger  Williams  professed  that  no  Want  or 
Misery  should  have  induced  him  thereto,1  so  he  and  his  men  had  to  depart  in 
doublet  and  hose  only.™ 

On  the  23rd  of  Aug.  the  LL.  Justices  report  that  the  Kingsmeales,  being  both 
actors  in  the  same,  returned  this  day,  assuring  us  that  all  the  companies  were 
safely  returned  to  the  Newry  with  bagg  and  baggage  and  their  collors  displayed. 
At  the  departing  of  the  companies  from  Armagh  it  was  agreed  that  they  shold 
march  directly  to  Dondalk;  but  they,  for  som  respects  knowen  to  themselves, 
breaking  that  agreement  took  their  way  immediately  to  the  Newry,  from  whence 
it  will  be  veray  hazardous  to  come  by  Dondalk  by  land,  having  to  pass  by  the 
Moyerye  straite,  which  we  heare  Tirone  hath  manned  to  impeach  their  passage, 
taking  occasion,  as  it  seemethe,  in  that  they  went  to  the  Newry  and  not  to  Don- 
dalk according  to  agreement.     We  are  now  in  consideracion  how  to  fetch  them 

'  1  he  Kingsmills.      k  Annala.      '  Moryson,     m  Chamberlain  to  Carleton. — Domestic  S.  Papers. 


APPENDIX.  325 

by  sea  from  Carlingford,  which  though  it  may  be  thought  not  fully  honourable, 
for  that  heretofore  yt  hath  not  bein  usuall ;  yet  for  that  the  companies  are  pes- 
tered with  sundry  hurte  men  ;  and  that  they  have  much  baggage,  which  other- 
wise they  cannot  carry  being  utterly  destitute  of  garrans  and  all  portage  over- 
land, we  dowte  that  this  necessity  will  dryve  us  to  fetch  them  off  by  sea." 
After  the  departure  of  the  English  from  Tyrone,  O'Neill  gave  orders  to  rec- 
kon and  bury  the  gentlemen  and  common  people  slain,  and  they  were  found 
to  be  2500  slain,  among  whom  was  the  General,  with  18  Captains,  and  a 
great  number  of  gentlemen  whose  names  are  not  given." 

On  the  23rd  of  Aug.  Ormond  says  :  We  have  heard  that  the  companies  are 
come  saffely  to  Dondalk  over  the  Moyery  without  any  impediment  of  thenemies 
and  I,  the  L.  Lieftenant  General,  am  now  preparing  to  draw  to  the  borders  for 
disposing  of  themp.  He  about  the  same  time  announced  that  the  Castle  of 
Alderfleete  '  standing  upon  the  north  seas  towards  Scotland,'  had  been  taken, 
and  that  he  could  not  procure  the  liberation  of  Capt"  Constable  from 
M'Sorleyq.  This  M'Sorley  was  a  Barbarian  of  handsome  figure  and  dignified 
bearing.  On  Friday,  the  4th  of  Nov.  1597,  he  was  asked  to  a  parley  by  Sir  J. 
Chichester,  Governor  of  Carrigfergus,  and  was  treacherously  attacked  by  him  and 
his  officers  ;  but  he  killed  280,  and  wounded  30  or  40  of  the  English,  slew 
Chichester  and  his  lieutenant  and  both  his  Serjeants,  Capt"  Mansell  and  his  lieu- 
tenant and  both  his  Serjeants,  Lieutenant  Price  with  his  Serjeants  and  drum. 
Capt"s  Merriman,  Hill  and  Warte  were  wounded  and  Capt"s  Constable  and  Banks 
were  made  prisoners  ;  the  heads  of  Chichester  and  Mansell  were  sent  to  O'Neill, 
and  their  bodies  to  Capt.  Egerton  for  burial  p. 

16. — The  War  in  Leinster. 

After  (Clifford)  the  Governor  of  Connaught  and  O'Rourke  had  parted  from 
each  other  in  peace,  in  May,  at  the  town  of  Athlone,  and  when  O'Rourke  saw 
that  the  English  were  not  at  this  time  more  powerful  than  the  Irish,  he  was  afraid 
that  O'Donnell  would  plunder  his  territory;  and  therefore  he  came  at  the  first 
summons  of  O'Donnell,  and  did  whatever  was  requested  of  him.  This  he  did  by 
the  advice  of  his  people.  Having  confirmed  his  friendship  with  O'Donnell,  he 
proceeded  with  his  forces,  at  the  instance  of  O'Ferrall  Ban,  (i.  e.  Ross,  son  of 
William,  son  of  Donell)  into  Meath ;  and  they  plundered  Mullingar,  and  the 

D  Lords  Justices  and  Ormond.  "Anna/a.  v  Kilk.  Jour,  of  Arch. 

q  Ulster  fourn.of  Arch.,  No.   19.  '  Balcarres  Papers. 


326  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

country  from  Mullingar  to  Ballymore-Lough-Sewdya.  About  the  7th  of  June 
O'Neill  sent  aid  to  Phelim  Mac  Feogh,  chief  of  the  O'Brians,  to  the  end  they 
might  make  war  in  Leinsterb.  Six  hundred  soldiers  arrived  from  England.  On 
reaching  Dungarvan  they  marched  to  join  Lord  Ormond,  and,  as  they  passed 
along  the  borders  of  Leinster,  they  were  fought  with  by  a  party  of  the  Irish  of 
that  district,  and  lost  410  of  their  number1.  Owney  O'More  went  to  Ulster  to 
obtain  help  from  O'Neill.  In  his  absence  Brian  O'More  had  several  successful 
combats  with  the  English  and  their  allies,  the  Anglo-Irish  of  Wexford,  and  took 
from  them  7  colours  and  14  drums. d 

To  check  Brian  O'More  a  hosting  was  made  by  Ormond  in  the  month  of  June 
to  proceed  into  Leix.  His  forces  amounted  to  24  companies  of  foot  and  200 
horse",  [or  3000'  men  altogether  or  perhaps  only  2000  foot  and  some  horse*]. 
In  the  evening  he  encamped  on  a  hill  on  the  borders  of  the  territory.  He  was 
informed  that  night  that  there  were  only  a  few  to  guard  that  territory ;  and  in  the 
morning  following  he  ordered  his  brother's  son,  (i.  e.  James,  son  of  Edward,  son 
of  James  Butler)  to  go,  with  6  or  7  companies  [or  perhaps  1000  Irish  and  Eng- 
lish footh]  through  the  passes  into  the  nearest  head  of  the  territory,  to  see  whe- 
ther he  could  perform  any  exploit.  Although  James  was  loth  to  go  on  that 
expedition,  early  on  Sunday  morning '  he  set  out  at  the  command  of  the  Earl. 
He  found  his  path  cut,  deeply  furrowed  and  barred  by  Brian  Reagh  O'More,  who 
had  come  with  150  [or  300  foot j]  soldiers  to  defend  it  on  the  same  day.  Fierce 
and  terriffic  was  the  salute,  which  Brian  and  his  forces  gave  James  and  his 
soldiersk.  As  he  was  attacked  in  two  columns,  he  was  forced  to  leave  his  vantage- 
ground,  and  with  darts  and  shot  he  attacked,  in  open  ground,  the  column  in 
which  Butler  was.  He  was  shot  himself;  but  his  wound  only  made  him  fight 
more  fiercely.*  The  Anglo-Irish  were  attacked  in  front  and  in  the  rear,  hemmed 
in  and  surrounded,  speared  and  shot ;  in  a  short  time  bodies  were  left  mangled 
and  pierced  along  the  pass.  A  lamentable  death  occurred  here — James,  the  son 
of  Edward,  son  of  Pierce,  son  of  James',  son  of  Pierce — a  man  of  whom  greater 
expectations  had  been  formed  than  of  any  other  of  his  age  of  the  Butlers  living 
at  that  time  [and  who  was  a  Catholic,  was  killed  by  two  guhshot  wounds**].  And 
such  of  his  men,  as  had  not  been  cut  off,  returned  as  broken-shielded  fugitives  to 
the  Earl."1     The  second  column,  coming  to  the  support  of  the  first,  was  broken 

a  Annala,  p.  2055.  b  Moryson.  c  Annala.  d  O'Sullcran.     Perhaps  the  combat 

mentioned  by  the  Annala  was  one  of  these.  '  Annala.  '  Lombard.  e  O'Sullevan. 

>>  O'Sullman.  '  11th  18th  or  25th  of  June.  >  O'Sullrvan.  k  Annala.  *  O'Sitllrvan. 

Annala.     "  Pierce,"  in  O'Donovan's  Version,  is  a  mistake.  •*  O'Sitllrvan. 

_  Annala. 


APPENDIX.  327 

also.*  Brian  pursued  the  fugitives,  slew  many  of  them,  and  would  have  slain 
more,  if  Ormond  had  not  come  up  to  fetch  them  off."  Lombard  says  that  the 
O'Mores  slew  1500  of  their  enemies.p  Brian  Reagh  died  of  his  wound  within 
four  days,  and  his  death  would  perhaps  have  been  a  crushing  blow  to  Leinster 
were  it  not  for  the  opportune  arrival  of  Owny  O'More,  immediately  after  the 
battle. q 

17. — Owny  O'More  and  Tyrrell  come  to  Leinster. 

On  that  very  day,  after  the  fight,  Owny,  the  son  of  Rory  Oge  O'More  ; 
Redmond  Burke,  son  of  John  of  the  Shamrocks  ;  Dermond  O'Connor,  and  Cap- 
tain Tyrrell  came  and  pitched  their  camp  opposite  the  Earl's  camp ;  but  he, 
before  noon  of  the  next  day,  Monday,  returned  to  Kilkenny,  and  sent  his  sol- 
diers to  their  garrisons.'  Owney  had  brought  1500  veteranss  from  O'Neill,  and 
three  stout  captains,  Tyrrell,  Burke  and  O'Connor.  Redmond  Burke  was  Baron 
of  Leitrim,  son  of  Shan  of  the  Shamrocks,  son  of  Richard  Saxonach,  son  of 
Ulick  of  the  Heads.  With  a  party  of  his  young  kinsmen,  all  of  the  first  dis- 
tinction, he  went  to  O'Neill  to  complain  of  the  answer  he  received  from  his 
father's  brother,  the  Earl  of  Clanrickard  :  '  that  if  Redmond  would  be  satisfied 
with  one  mantle's  breadth  of  his  inheritance,  he  would  not  give  him  so  much,  as 
a  reward  for  war  or  peace.'  O'Neill  promised  to  assist  him  and  gave  him  com- 
mand of  some  hundreds  of  soldiers,  with  permission  to  plunder  and  devastate 
any  part  of  Ireland,  which  had  any  connexion  or  alliance  with  the  English. 
When  he  and  his  kinsmen  left  O'Neill,  they  went  into  the  confederation  of  the 
Irish  of  Leinster  and  remained  with  them  during  the  summer.' 

As,  on  the  2d  of  August,  the  state  of  Leinster  was  endangered  in  ev^  parte  by 
the  rebells  of  the  province,  aided  by  forces  from  Tyrone,  who  had  sent  forces  to 
several  parts  to  assist  the  traitors  there,  and  sturr  up  rebellion  in  Mounster,  it 
was  concluded,  says  Ormond,  that  [the  Marshall  should  draw  to  the  North  and] 
I,  the  Lord  Lieuten-Gen'  with  another  parte  of  the  armye  should  prosecute  the 
traitors  of  Leinster  ;  in  whiche  prosecution  seven  of  the  chefe  traitors  were,  with 
divers  of  there  followers,  putt  to  the  sworde ;  others  also  entering  into  rebellion 
in  Mounster  were  stayed  by  me." 

18. — Ormond  relieves  Maryborough. 

A  great  hosting  was  made  by  Ormond  to  place  provisions  in  Portleix 
(Maryborough).  His  army  was  met  by  Owny,  son  of  Rory  Oge,  son  of  Rory 
Caoch  O'More  ;  by  Redmond  Burke  and  by  Captain  Richard  Tyrrell,  son  of 
Thomas  Oge  Tyrrell.     Ormond  lost  more  than  the  value  of  the  provisions  in 

"  O'SulUvan.      °  Lombard,  p.  167.    p  O'Su/tevan.     q  Annala.      'Lombard  and  Cox.      *  Annala. 

u  Ormond,  Aug.  2d  and  l8,h. 


328  STATE    OF    IRELAND     1 598. 

men,  horses  and  arms ;  he  was  wounded  and  escaped  with  great  difficulty." 
O'Sullevan  describes  an  attempt  made  by  Ormond  to  provision  Port  Leix,  as  it 
may  be  the  one  recorded  by  the  Amiala,  I  translate  it  here. — 'As  Owny  O'More 
besieged  Portleix,  Ormond  went,  with  over  4000  horse  and  foot,  to  relieve  and 
re-victual  it;  he  was  attacked  at  the  Black  Ford  by  Owney  at  the  head  of  1400 
men,  and  lost  600  soldiers,  whose  bodies  he  burned,  lest  his  loss  should  be 
known — the  English  being  accustomed  to  hide  their  own  dead  and  to  expose  in 
public  places  the  bodies  of  their  foes.  There  were  60  Catholics  killed  and  80 
wounded.  Ormond,  however,  by  sheer  numbers  passed  on  and  provisioned  the 
fort." 

1 9.—  Successes  of  the  Insurgents. 

The  LL.  Justices  report,  on  the  17th  of  Aug.,  that,  in  spite  of  Ormond's 
authority,  the  Leinster  rebells  are  exceedingly  increased,  and  daily  burning, 
preying  and  spoiling  the  contrye,  having  already  possessed  themselves  of  all  the 
Queenes  County,  called  Leix,  some  3  or  4  castles  at  the  most  excepted,  which 
cannot  long  hold  out.  There  they  possess  the  lands  so  dearly  bought  by  her 
Majesty  and  her  predecessors,  and  doe  even  in  a  peaceable  manner  enjoye  the 
goodes  and  cutt  downe  and  gather  the  comes  of  thauncient  English  gent"  of  that 
country.  The  lyke  sturr  have  they  already  begon  in  Offaley,  and  the  lyke  ende, 
in  all  lykelihood  will  they  make  there  .  .  they  do  what  they  list  without  con. 
trolm'.  A  great  parte  of  the  County  of  Kildare  they  have  already  spoyled  and 
burned,  and  daylie  advertisemB  we  have  of  there  entraunce  into  the  County  of 
Dublin,  and  of  there  purpose,  even  this  day,  as  we  understand,  to  make  heade 
even  towardes  this  citie ;  to  which  God  knoweth  they  may  make  an  easie 
approach  ;  yett  have  wee  sett  out  this  present  morning  the  nomber  of  six  or  seaven 
hundred  of  cittizens  and  others  to  ympeache  their  approache.  This  and  worse 
than  we  have  said  is  the  state  of  Leinster."  Ormond  was  ready  to  make  a  roade 
against  one  of  these  insurgents,  Donill  Spanaghe,  [or  Donal  called  the 
Spaniard]  when  he  heard  of  the  M'shal's  ill  successes  Donal  had  ravaged  with 
fire  and  sword  a  great  part  of  Meath,  because  the  people  of  that  region  would  not 
fight  for  the  Faith.2 

20. — The  Queen  sends  re-inforcetnents. 

On  the  12th  of  Sep.  Elizabeth  writes—  'We  make  choice  of  Sir  Richard 
Bingham,  whom  we  have  appointed  to  be  Marshal  of  that  realm,  to  repair 
thither.  Hear  him  lovingly  in  all  things  concerning  our  service,  wherein  we 
know  that  you,  our  cousin  of  Ormond,  our  Lieutenant,  will  find  great  ease  in 

Amiala.      "  O'Sullevan.       x  LL.  Justices,  Aug.  17.      »  Ormond  to  the  Queen,  Aug.  18. 

1  O'Sidlrv.n. 


APPENDIX. 


329 


every  way,  it  being  neither  fitt  nor  possible,  that  you  shold  spend  your  bodye 
in  all  services  at  all  tymes.  .  .  It  doth  not  a  little  trouble  us  to  find  such  hard 
effects  of  all  things  from  thence,  considering  the  notable  supplies  of  men,  trea- 
sure and  victuals  more  plentifully  sent  than  ever  heretofore.2  For  other  thinges 
past  we  have  well  observed,  that  all  yr  Jyorneyes  and  attemptes  upon  the  Northe 
have  had  these  successes,  that  not  only  our  armyes  have  come  backe  with  losse 
and  doinge  nothing,  but  in  their  absence  other  parts  of  our  Kingedome  have 
been  left  to  be  spoyled  and  wasted  ;  and  though  the  unyversalytie  of  the  Rebel- 
lion may  be  used  as  a  reason  for  the  mischiefe,  yet  it  is  almost  a  miracle  that, 
with  the  charges  of  an  armye  of  eight  or  nine  thousand  men  the  provincial  rebells 
of  Leinster  and  Wexforde  and  other  places  should  not  be  mastered.3 

Bingham,  sent  over  as  Marshal,  with  re-inforcements  [including  50  horseb], 
landed  at  Wexford,  and  on  his  march  to  Dublin  was  attacked  by  the  O'Mores 
and  O'Connors,  and  lost  most  of  his  men  ;  he  lost  the  remainder  and  his  own 
life,  and  a  number  of  other  soldiers  in  a  fight  with  O'Donnell  and  O'Rorke  in 
Connaught.0  This  statement  of  Lombard,  who,  perhaps,  confounds  Sir  C.  Clifford 
with  Bingham,  is  not  borne  out  by  any  other  writer  ;  on  the  other  hand, 
Camden  tells  us,  that  Bingham  died  as  soon  as  he  reached  Dublin. d  Sir  Samuel 
Bagnal  [about  the  end  of  August]  came  over  with  2000  foot  and  100  horse,  to 
strengthen  the  Queen's  Forces  in  the  heart  of  the  Kingdome  ;  the  old  companies 
numbering  1050,  drawne  out  of  the  Low  Countries,  were  commanded  by  Bagnall, 
Jephson,  Bodley,  Sidney,  Foulke  Conway,  Pynner,  Blaney,  Tobey  Caulfield, 
Heath  and  Owen  Tewder ;  the  new  men  were  under  Roe,  Egerton,  Bingley  and 
some  new  Captaines."  This  did  not  protect  the  heart  of  the  Kingdom  ;  for  we 
find  that  O'Rourke  made  a  hosting  in  the  first  month  of  autumn  (i.e.  from  Sep. 
23  to  Oct.  23),  and  he  did  not  halt  until  he  arrived  at  Tyrrell's  Pass,  and  the 
Pass  of  Kilbride  in  Fertullagh  [in  the  south  of  Westmeath].  He  seized  a  prey, 
and  slew  some  persons  at  Tyrrell's  Pass,  and  then  returned  home  to  his  country 
without  wound  or  danger/ 

21. — OMore  Marches  toivards  Minister. 

In  the  first  month  of  autumn,  [towards  the  end  of  September],  O'Neill  sent 
letters  to  Leinster,  requesting  Burke,  O'More  and  Tyrrell  to  intrust  the  guarding 
of  Leinster  to  some  of  their  allies ;  and  to  proceed,  themselves,  to  make  con- 
quests, and  to  bring  some  of  the  adverse  territories  over  to  their  cause,  and 
particularly  to  go  into   Munster,  at  the  invitation   of  Thomas  Ruadh,  son  of 

z  Car  Cal.  a  The  Queen  to  LL.  Justices,  Sep.  12,  in  Kilk.  J.  of  Arch. 

b  S.  P.  in  McCarthy  Mor.,  p.  173.  c  Lombard.  a  Yet  Elizabeth  speaks  of  him  as 

alive  on  the  1st  Dec.     Car.  Cat.,  p.  2S5.  "  Morysmt.  '  Anna'a. 

2    T 


33°  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  1 598. 

James,  son  of  John,  son  of  the  Earl  of  Desmond.  They  were  persuaded  and 
encouraged  to  go  by  Sir  Piers  Lacy,  a  brave  and  eloquent  gentleman  of  Mun- 
ster;6 and  O'More,  leaving  the  care  of  Leix  to  his  brother  Edmund,  led  800  foote 
and  about  200  horse  under  Redmond  Burke  (Baron  of  Leitrim),  and  his  brother 
William,  Dermot  O'Conchur  and  his  two  brothers  (Cairbre  and  Con),  and 
Captain  Tyrrell.*  When  they  marched  into  Ossory,  the  people  came  spon- 
taneously to  join  them,  except  Mac  Gillapatrick  (i.e.  Finin,  the  son  of  Brian,  son 
of  Finin).  They  afterwards  went  to  the  northern  extremity  of  Slieve  Bloom,  in 
order  to  induce  the  Irish  of  East  Munster  and  Westmeath  to  join  them,  namely 
O'Molloy,  and  Connell,  the  son  of  Cahir  O'Mulloy,  McCoghlan  (John  Oge,  the 
son  of  John,  son  of  Art,  son  of  Cormae),  and  O'Carroll  (Calvach,  son  of  William 
Odhar,  son  of  Ferganainm,  son  of  Mulrony).  Although  these  chieftains  had  for 
some  time  stood  by  their  Sovereign,  they  were  glad  to  obtain  terms  of  peace  from 
these  strange  warriors,  who  were  traversing  their  country.  After  agreeing  upon 
terms  of  peace  with  them  the  Leinster  men  turned  their  faces  towards  the  two 
Ormonds  in  Munster. h 

22. — The  War  in  Munster. 
The  Irish  perceiving  that  the  English  had  sustained  many  disasters  in  the 
North,  Connaught  and  Leinster,  following  the  current  of  the  present  time,  began 
to  dismaske  themselves;  and,  being  united  in  strict  Combination,  did  verily 
persuade  themselves,  that  it  would  be  very  feasible  to  make  themselves  masters 
of  all  Ireland,  if  the  chiefe  Lords  of  Mounster,  with  their  friends  and  followers 
would  join  with  them.  They  did  account  that  Province  to  bee  the  Key  of  the 
Kingdome,  both  by  reason  of  the  cities  and  walled  townes,  (which  arc  more  than 
in  all  the  Island  besides),  the  fruitfulnesse  of  the  Country,  being  reputed  the 
garden  of  Ireland,  and  the  commodious  harbors  lying  open  both  to  France  and 
Spain."  Early  in  October  the  O'Mores  burst  into  Upper  and  Lower  Ormond, 
and  from  them  they  sought  neither  peace  nor  friendship,  but  proceeded  to  plun- 
der them  at  once,  on  account  of  their  enmity  towards  the  Earl  of  Ormond.  They 
took  five  of  the  castles  of  Ormond,  one  of  which,  Druim-Aidhneach,  on  the 
margin  of  the  Shannon,  Burke  kept  to  himself,  for  waging  war  on  Clanrickard 
out  of  it.  They  remained  for  two  or  three  weeks  encamped  in  that  country ; 
and  the  spoils  of  the  region  bordering  on  the  Suir  were  brought  to  their  camp  ; 
and  their  Irish  neighbours  came  to  join  in  the  same  confederation  with  them. 
Among  those  who  joined  were,  O'Dwyer  of  Kilnamanagh  i.e  Dermot,  the  son  of 

*  Annr.la  and  0' Sullivan.  •  CrSuBevan.  h  Annala.        a  Potato  Hibernia,  p.  2. 


APPENDIX.  331 

Chvny,  son  of  Philip  ;  the  sons  of  Mac  Brian  O'gCuanach,  namely,  the  sons  ol 
Murtough,  son  of  Turlough,  son  of  Murtough ;  the  Ryans  about  Conor-na- 
Mainge,  the  son  of  William  Caech,  son  of  Dermot  O'Mulryan ;  and  the  race  of 
Brian  Oge  of  Duharra.  After  these  Irish  (septs)  had  formed  a  confederacy  with 
O'Neill's  people,  and  after  having  induced  (the  people  of)  every  territory  into 
which  they  came  to  join  them,  they  marched  with  the  rising-out  of  these  districts, 
at  the  instance  of  the  sons  of  Thomas  Roe,  son  of  the  Earl  (of  Desmond)  into 
the  country  of  the  Geraldines.  They  first  went  to  the  county  of  Limerick.  The 
President,  Sir  Thomas  Norris,  was  at  that  time  at  Kilmallock,  and  when  he  per- 
ceived that  he  was  not  able  to  contend  with  the  Irish,  he  went  to  Cork,  to  avoid 
them.  They  then  proceeded  westwards,  across  the  River  Maigue  into  Connello 
and  to  the  borders  of  Sliabh-Luachra  and  Gleann-Corbraighe.  James,  the  son 
of  Thomas  Roe  (Fitzgerald),  came  to  join  them  in  Connello  on  this  occasion  ; 
and  John,b  the  second  son  of  Thomas  Roe,  was  already  along  with  them,  upon 
these  expeditions,  for  he  had  come  to  draw  them  into  the  country.  At  this  time 
they  offered  and  sold  at  their  camp  a  stripper,  or  a  cow  in  calf,  for  sixpence,  a 
brood  mare  for  threepence  and  the  best  hog  for  a  penny ;  and  these  bargains 
were  offered  aud  proclaimed  in  every  camp  in  which  they  were.c 

Chief  Justice  Saxey  '  in  lamentable  wise  advertiseth  thr  Honrs  Los  :  (the 
Council)  that  about  the  5th  of  October  3000  rebells  came  (into  Mounster)  by 
Arlough,  and  so  into  the  com.  of  Limerick  under  the  leading  of  John  Fitz  Thomas, 
second  sonne  of  Sir  Thoms  of  Desmond,  and  of  one  Tirrell.  Presentlie  the  said 
John  was  proclaimed  Earle  of  Desmond,  who,  as  is  said,  took  it  upon  him,  if  his 
elder  brother  James  would  not  ioyne  with  them,  and  assent  to  be  proclaimed 
Earle  himself.  They  spoyled  most  of  the  country  townes  and  villages  within 
that  county.  On  Saturday  morning,  the  7th,  James  Fitz  Thomas  came  with  16 
horse  and  20  foot ;  and  the  purpose  of  the  traitors  was  to  create  him  Earl  of 
Desmond  at  the  hill  of  Ballioghly.d  On  the  8th  in  the  evening  there  came  to 
Ballingarrie,  out  of  Rannallaghe,  Cahir  McHugh,  brother  of  the  late  Feagh 
M'Hugh,  Thomas  Butler,  and  others  with  160  men,  the  rebells  being  then 
uniting  betwixt  Rathkeale  and  Ballingarrie.6  About  which  time  the  Vice-Pre- 
sident had  assembled  the  forces  of  the  Province,  with  full  purpose  to  encounter 
with  the  traitors,  finding  the  said  forces  to  be  in  shewe  able  to  equall  the  strength 
of  the  enemy ;  but  albeit  divers  of  the  noblemen  and  chiefe  gentlemen  of  the 
provincewere  then  and  there  ready,  as  it  seemed,  to  accompany  the  Governor 
in  this  conflict ;  yet  at  the  very  instant  the  most  parte  of  the  followers  of  the 
noblemen  and  gent"  went  to  the  enemy.5     Though  O'More  had  sent  him  a  letter 

b  'James'  is  a  mistake  of  O'Donovan's  translation, 
c  Annala.  d  Saxey,  in  McCarthy  Mor.  e  Weever  to  Cecil,  'Saxey, 


332  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1 598. 

to  challenge  him  to  fight/  Norreys  withdrew  upon  necessarie  occasion/ and  his 
troops  dispersed  without  so  much  as  seeing  the  enemy1';  however,  it  seems  he 
did  not  retire  unmolested,  as  the  Irish  kerne  had  some  skirmishing  with  his  rear 
guard.' 

When  Ormond  heard  of  the  progress  of  these  warlike  troops,  he  set  out  with 
all  his  cavalry  and  infantry  for  the  County  of  Limerick,  to  meet  them,  and  sent  a 
message  to  Cork,  requesting  the  President  to  come  to  meet  him  at  Kilmallock.* 
He  wrote  also  to  the  Earl  of  Desmond  as  follows — From  the  Campe  at  Cowlin, 
Oct.  8.  1598,  "James  Fitz  Thomas,  Hit  seemed  to  us  most  strange,  when  wee 
herd  you  were  combined  and  j  oined  with  theis  Leinster  Traytors  lately  repayred 
into  Munster,  considering  how  your  father,  Sir  Thomas,  always  contenued  a 
dutifull  subject,  and  did  manie  good  offices  to  further  Her  Mat's  service  :  from 
which  course  if  you  should  digresse,  and  now  ioyn  with  these  unnatural  traytors, 
we  may  think  you  very  unwise,  and  that  you  bring  upon  yourself  your  own  con- 
fusion, vf*  is  thende  of  all  traytors,  as  by  daylie  experience  you  have  seene. 
Wherefore  we  will  that  you  do  presentlie  make  your  repair  unto  us,  wheresoever 
you  shall  heare  of  our  being,  to  lay  down  your  greefes  and  complaints,  if  you 
have  anie ;  and,  if  you  stand  in  any  doubt  of  yourself,  theis  our  letters  shall  be 
for  you  and  such  as  shall  accompany  you  in  your  coming  and  returning,  your 
safetyes  ;  and  further,  on  your  drawing  nere  the  place,  where  we  shall  be,  we  will 
send  you  safe  conduct  for  you,     Thomas  Ormond  and  Ossery.' 

'  Given  at  the  Camp  of  Cowlin  8  Oct.  1598. 

'  We  need  not  put  you  in  mind  of  the  late  overthrowe  of  th'  Erie  your  uncle, 
who  was  plaged  with  his  partakers  by  fire,  sword  and  famine  ;  and  be  assured,  if 
you  proceed  in  any  traiterous  actions,  you  will  have  the  like  end.  What  her 
Mat's  forces  have  done  against  the  King  of  Spaine,  and  is  liable  to  do  against 
ani  other  enemie,  the  world  hath  sene,  to  her  immortal  fame ;  by  which  you  may 
judge  what  she  is  hable  to  do  against  you,  or  anie  others,  that  shall  become 
traytors.' 

Superscribed  '  To  James  Fitz  Geralde  geve  theis  in  hast." 

Desmond  answered  thus — 

"James:  Desmonde  to  Ormond 

R1  Hon :  I  received  your  Los  lettres,  wherein  your  Lo.  doth  specify,  that  you 
think  it  verie  straunge,  that  I  should  join  in  action  with  these  gentlemen  of 
Leinster.  It  is  so  that  I  have  ever  at  all  times  behaved  myself  dutifully,  and  as 
a  true  subject  to  her  Ma'tie  as  ever  laie  in  me  ;  and  as  it  is  well  known  to  your 
Lo.  I  have  showed  my  willingness  in  service  against  my  uncle  and  his  adherents, 

1  O'Sullei'an.  g  Moryson.  h  Camden.  '  O'Sul'evan.  *  Anna/a. 


APPENDIX.  333 

whereby  I  have  been  partlie  a  mean  of  his  destruction.  Before  my  uncle's 
decease,  it  may  be  remembered  by  your  Lo,  I  have  been  in  England  from  my 
Father,  claiming  title  to  his  inheritance  of  the  house  of  Desmonde,  which  is 
manifestlie  known  to  be  his  righte  ;  whereupon  her  Ma'ty  promised  to  do  me 
justice  upon  the  decease  of  my  uncle,  who  then  was  in  action,  and  have  allowed 
me  a  mark  sterling  per  diem  towards  my  maintenance  untill  her  Matt's  further 
pleasure  were  known  ;  of  which  I  never  received  but  one  year's  paie  ;  and  ever 
since  my  uncle's  decease  I  could  get  no  hearing  concerning  my  inheritance  of 
the  Earldome  of  Desmonde,  but  have  bestowed  the  same  upon  divers  under- 
takers to  disinherit  me  for  ever.  Having  all  this  while  stayed  myself,  in  hope 
to  be  gratiouslie  dealt  withall  by  her  Ma'tie,  seeing  no  other  remedie,  and  that 
I  could  get  no  indifferencie,  I  will  follow,  by  all  the  means  I  can,  to  maintaine 
my  right  trusting  in  the  Almighty  to  further  the  same. 

My  verie  good  Lo  :  I  have  seene  so  many  bad  examples  in  seeking  of  diverse 
manie  gentlemen  bluddely  false  and  sinister  accusations  cut  off  and  executed  to 
deathe,  that  the  noblemen  and  chief  gentlemen  of  this  Province  cannot  think 
themselves  assured  of  their  lives,  if  they  were  contented  to  lose  their  lands  and 
living.  As  for  example,  Redmond  Fitz  Geralde,  upon  the  false  accusation  of  a 
scurvey  boy  for  safeguard  of  his  life,  was  put  to  death,  being  a  gentleman  of 
good  calling,  being  three  score  years  of  age,  and  innocent  of  the  crime  charged 
withall.  Donagh  Mc  Craghe  also  was  executed  upon  the  false  information  of  a 
villainous  Kerne,  who  within  a  sevennight  was  putt  to  death  within  yor  Lop's 
Libertie  of  Clonmell,  who  took  upon  his  salvacion,  all  that  he  said  against  the 
said  Donagh  was  untrue,  that  he  was  suborned  by  others.  Of  late  a  poore  cosen 
of  ours,  James  Fitz  Morrys  of  Mochollopa  is  so  abominably  dealt  withall,  upon 
the  false  accusation  of  an  Englishman  accusing  him  of  murder,  who  never  drew 
sworde  in  anger  all  the  days  of  his  life,  and  is  manifestely  knowen  that  he  never 
gave  cause  to  be  suspected  of  the  like.  Piers  Lacy  who  was  an  earnest  servitor, 
and  had  the  kiling  of  Rory  Mc  Morrogho,  and  the  apprehension  of  Morrogho 
Oge  till  he  left  him  in  the  gaol  of  Limerick  ;  and  after  all  his  services  was  driven 
for  the  sauegarde  of  his  leife  to  be  a  fugitive.  To  be  brief  with  yo  :  Lo  :  English- 
men were  not  contented  to  have  our  lands  andjiving,  but  unmercifullie  to  seeke 
our  leives  by  false  and  sinister  means  under  cullor  of  Lawe  ;  and.  as  for  my 
parte,  I  will  prevent  it  the  best  I  maie. 

'  Committing  yo :  Lo  :  to  God,  I  am  yor  Lo.'s  loving  Cosen, 

'  Ja :  Desmonde. 

From  the  Camp  at  Carrigrone  12  Oct  1598.'^ 

J  A'ilk.Jour.  of  Arch.    Unpublished  Geraldine  Documents. 


334  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1 598. 

The  day  Desmond  sent  this  letter  from  his  camp,  within  four  miles  of  Cork, 
Ormond  wrote  to  the  Queen — -'  At  my  coming  to  Munster  I  found  that  all  the 
undertakers,  three  or  four  excepted,  had  most  shamefully  forsaken  all  their 
Castelles  and  dwelling  plases  before  anie  rebell  came  within  sight  of  them  and 
left  their  castells  with  their  munitions,  stuff  and  cattell  to  the  traytors  and  no 
manner  of  resistance  made.'11 

When  the  Irish  army,  who  were  encamped  in  the  west  of  Connello,  heard  that 
Ormond  and  Norreys  were  to  meet  at  Kilmallock,  they  marched  eastwards 
towards  Kilmallock  and  showed  themselves  to  these  lords  ;  the  Earl  and  the 
President  agreed  to  avoid  meeting  them  and  turned  towards  Magh-Ealla 
[Mallow].  The  Irish  pursued  them  to  the  gate  of  Magh-Ealla  and  proceeded 
to  provoke  them  (to  battle),  saying,  that  they  could  never  wreak  their  vengeance 
upon  them  better  than  now,  when  they  were  all  (together)  in  one  place.  Not- 
withstanding this,  it  was  determined  that  the  President  should  repair  to  Cork 
and  that  the  Earl  should  return  to  the  territory  of  the  Butlers.  As  the  country 
was  left  in  the  power  of  the  Irish  on  this  occasion,  they  conferred  the  title  of 
Earl  of  Desmond,  by  the  authority  of  O'Neill,  upon  James,  the  son  of  Thomas 
Roe,  son  of  James,  son  of  John,  son  of  the  Earl;  and  in  the  course  of  seventeen 
days,  they  left  not  within  the  country  of  the  Geraldines  (extending)  from  Dun- 
queen  to  the  Suir,  which  the  Saxons  had  well  cultivated  and  filled  with  habita- 
tions and  various  wealth,  a  single  son*  of  a  Saxon,  whom  they  did  not  either  kill 
or  expel.  Nor  did  they  leave  within  this  time,  a  single  head  residence,  castle,  or 
one  sod  of  Geraldine  territory  which  they  did  not  put  into  the  possession  of  the 
Earl  of  Desmond,  excepting  only  Castlemaine  in  the  co.  of  Kerry,  Askeaton  in 
Hy-Connell-Gaura,  and  Magh-Ealla  (Mallow),  in  the  co.  of  Cork.  When  these 
agents  of  O'Neill  had,  in  a  short  time,  accomplished  this  great  labour,  they 
took  their  leave  of  this  Earl  whom  they  themselves  had  appointed.  O'More 
and  such  part  of  the  forces  who  adhered  to  him,  set  out  for  Leix ;  Burke 
and  that  part  of  the  same  hosting,  over  which  he  had  command,  proceeded 
to  Ormond ;  and  the  Ulster  troops  who  were  along  with  these  gentlemen 
proceeded  to  their  homes,  not  without  wealth  or  booty  acquired  on  this 
expedition.  Tyrrell  remained  with  the  Earl,  who  continued  spending  and 
subjugating  Munster,  and  gaining  more  and  more  people  over  to  his  side> 
during  the  remaining  two  months  of  this  year.' 


k McCarthy  Mor.  *  Moryson  says   they  did  not  spare  the  daughters;  but 

his  authority  needs  support.     The  Earl  of  Desmond  wrote   to   Carew   in    1601,  "I    defye   any 
English  that  can  charge  me  with  hindering  of  them  in  bodye  or  goods."         '  Annala. 


APPENDIX.  335 

23. — Result  of  the  Inroad  of  the  Leinster  Men. 
The  Munster  confederacy  was  joined  by  McMoris,  Baron  of  Lixnaw,  Fitz 
Gerald  (the  Knight  of  Kerry),  Fitz  Gerald  (the  Knight  of  Glynn),  Fitz  Gibbon 
(the  White  Knight),  by  Dermot  and  Donogh  McCarthy  of  Duhallow,  Donal 
son  of  McCarthy  Mor,  Condon,  O'Donoghu  of  Onacht,  and  O'Donoghu  of 
the  Glen  ;  by  Lords  Fermoy,  Mountgarret,  and  Caher,™  and  Purcell,  Baron  of 
Lochmoe,  with  many  young  Butlers."  The  rebellion  brake  out  like  lightning," 
disobedience  had  spread  from  the  rural  districts  to  the  walled  cities  and  post 
towns  :  200  of  Ormond's  soldiers  had  deserted  to  the  enemy,  who  were  an  in- 
sufferable, disdainful,  insolent  people  ; p  there  was  no  county  in  Munster  but  was 
impassable  for  any  subject,  especially  for  all  who  wore  hose  or  breeches  after 
the  English  manner.q  Unless  Her  Majesty  shall  royally  undertake  the  prose- 
cution, the  Kingdom  will  be  lost — there  is  nothing  now  left  but  Dublin  and  the 
Port  of  Wexford' ;  and  the  Queen  takes  it  much  to  heart  that  with  10,000  men 
she  is  in  no  part  able  to  defend  herself.5  On  the  4th  of  November  Cecil  writes — 
'  The  disease  is  general ;  the  religion  bad ;  the  nobility  discontented ;  the  sol- 
diers beaten ;  the  discipline  corrupted  ;  her  Irishman  an  after  game,  except  we 
see  a  blot  and  enter  and  bind.  Ulster  a  country  so  strong  and  so  wild  as  never 
conquered  nor  quiet ;  wholly  in  rebellion  except  some  scores  (?)  ;  the  climate 
unwholesome  ;  the  passages  so  difficult  as  my  Lord  Burgh — The  General 
Norreys  never  could  look  over  the  water  ;  good  soldiers,  well  armed,  and  in 
blood..'  On  December  the  1st  Elizabeth  writes  to  the  Council — '  We  have 
sent  over  great  supplies,  to  our  excessive  charge;  yet  we  receive  naught  else 
but  news  of  fresh  losses  and  calamities.  Although  you  have  the  great  number 
of  9000  men,  we  do  not  only  see  the  northern  traitor  untouched  at  home,  and 
range  where  else  he  pleased,  but  the  provincial  rebels  in  every  province,  by 
such  as  he  can  spare,  enabled  to  give  law  to  our  provincial  governors ;  besides 
that  the  Pale  is  not  only  wasted,  but  the  walls  of  Dublin,  (where  our  State  is 
seated),  esteemed  unsafe,  and  (as  we  hear)  the  suburbs  thought  a  dangerous 
lodging  for  some  of  our  principal  counsellors... we  will  send  a  sufficient  force  of 
horse  and  foot  out  of  England,  strengthened  with  old  soldiers  of  the  Low 
Countries.'  On  the  3rd  of  Decr  she  writes  to  the  L.  President  of  Munster — 'We 
have  understood  how  strange  a  revolt  has  happened  in  Munster.  When  the  first 
traitor  grew  to  head,  with  a  ragged  number  of  rogues  and  boys,  you  might 
better  have  resisted  than  you  did,  especially  considering  the  many  defensible 

m  0' Sullivan.         n  Annala.         °  Moryson.  P  Sir  T.  Norreys.         1  Sir  N.  Walsh. 

'Wallop — an  exaggeration.  s  Cecil.       See  McCarthy  Mor.,  p.  181 .  '  Cecil,  in 

Car.  Cal.,  p.  523, 


336  STATE  OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1 598. 

houses  and  castles  possessed  by  the  Undertakers,  who,  for  aught  we  can  hear, 
were  no  way  comforted  nor  supported  by  you,  but  either  from  lack  of  comfort 
from  you  or  out  of  mere  cowardice,  fled  away  from  the  rebels  on  the  first  alarm." 
We  have  sent  over  2000  foot  for  your  aid,  and  given  orders  to  increase  your  30 
horse  to  50,  in  sterling  pay,  and  to  send  over  another  100  horses.  There  are 
some  out  or  suspected,  who  might  be  used,  on  their  claims  for  land  being 
granted,  as  good  instruments  against  the  capital  rebels.  Of  such  are  the  White 
Knight,  Condon,  and  Donogh  McCormacke  of  the  Dually/ 

24. — Fighting  in  Thomond. 
There  was  strife  among  some  of  the  gentlemen  of  Thomond  concerning  the 
division  and  joint-tenure  of  their  territory  lands.  Among  them  was  Teig,  the 
son  of  Conor,  son  of  Donogh  O'Brien,  by  whom  the  bridge  of  Portcroisi  was 
taken ;  and  although  he  was  not  the  first  who  had  attempted  to  take  it  (by 
force)  from  Margaret  Cusack,  it  was  to  him  it  finally  fell.  He  also  took  the 
castle  of  Cluain  in  Hy-Caisin,  and  the  castle  of  Sgairbh,  in  the  east  of  Hy-Bloid, 
from  the  attorney  of  the  Bishop  of  Meath's  son.  Among  these  was  also  Conor, 
son  of  Donnell,  son  of  Mahon,  son  of  Brian  O'Brien,  who  took  Baile-an- 
chaislein,  in  Upper  Clann-Cuilein,  from  Mac  Namara  Finn  (John,  the  son  of 
Teige,  son  of  Cumeadha).  Among  them  was  Turlough,  son  of  Mahon,  from 
Coill  O'Flannchadha,  who  took  from  George  Cusack  Derryowen,  at  first  the 
patrimony  of  the  sons  of  Auliffe,  the  son  of  Cian  O'Shaughnessy.  Mahon,  the 
son  of  Turlough  Boy,  obtained  Coill  O'Flannchadha.  Among  the  same  gentle- 
men was  Turlough,  the  son  of  Murrough,  son  of  Conor  O'Brien,  from  Cathair- 
Mionain,  and  his  kinsman,  Dermot  Roe,  who  joined  in  the  war  of  the  Irish. 
Among  them,  moreover,  was  Teig  Caech,  the  son  of  Turlough,  son  of  Brian, 
son  of  Donough  Mac  Mahon,  who,  about  Christmas  in  this  year,  captured  an 
English  ship,  that  had  been  going  astray  for  a  long  time  before.  It  happened  to 
put  in  at  a  harbour  in  Western  Corca-Bhaiscinn,  in  the  neighbourhood  of 
Carraig-an-Chobhlaigh.  Teig  took  away  this  ship  from  the  crew,  and  all  the 
valuable  things  it  contained.  It  was  not  long  after  till  Teig  found  the  profit 
very  trivial,  and  the  punishment  severe.  The  same  Teig  took  Dunbeg,  one  of 
his  own  castles,  from  a  Limerick  merchant,  who  had  it  in  his  possession,  in  lieu 

of  debt." 

25. — The   War  in   Connaught. 

Ballymote,  which  had  been  in  the  possession  of  the  English,  for  the  space  of 

"  Lombard  says  1800   of  them  and  their  followers  sailed  from  Waterford  in  18  vessels.      The 
poet  Spenser  was  one  of  these  exiles.         '  Elizabeth's  Letters,  in  Car.  Cat.       w  Annala. 


APPENDIX.  337 

thirteen  years  before  this  time,  was  taken  this  summer  by  its  rightful  inheritors, 
the  Clann-Donnough  of  Corran,  namely,  Tomaltagh  and  Cathal  Duv.    Governor 
Clifford,  and  O'Donnell  (Hugh   Roe)  were  auctioning   the  castle  against  each 
other,  in  offering  to  purchase  it  from  the   Clann-Donnough.     The  close  of  the 
bargain  was,  that  the  Clann-Donnough  gave  up  the  castle  to  O'Donnell  for  a 
purchase  and  contract  in  the  middle  month  of  the  autumn.     Four  hundred 
pounds  (in  money)  and  three  hundred  cows,  was  the  price  which  O'Donnell 
gave.     In  Autumn  O'Donnell  sent  a  body  of  forces  from  Tirconnell  with  Mac 
William  (Theobald,  the  son  of  Walter  Kittagh,  son  of  John,  son  of  Oliver)  into 
Mac  William's  territory.     He  sent  with  him  on  this  occasion  O'Doherty  (John 
Oge,  the  son  of  John,  son  of  Felim,  son  of  Conor  Carragh)  with   a  great  force. 
They  were  scarcely  noticed  in   any  country  through  which  they  passed,  until 
they  arrived  in  the  Owles  ;  and  it  was  in  these  (territories)  the  greater  part  of 
the  herds  and  flocks  of  all  Mac  William's  country  then  were.     They  collected  all 
the  cattle  that  were  on  the  main  land,  outside  the  small  islands ;  and  though 
great  was  the  collection  of  preys  they  made,  they  encountered  no  danger  or 
difficulty,  save  only  the  trouble  of  driving  them  off.     And  they  returned  safe  to 
their  territories,  i.e.   Mac  William  to  Tirawly,  and  O'Dogherty  to  Irishowen. 
When    O'Donnell  had    obtained   possession    of    Ballymote   in  the   middle    of 
Autumn,  the  Kinel-Connel  sent  their  creaghts  into  the  county  of  Sligo ;  and 
O'Donnell  himself  resided  at  Ballymote  from  the  time  it  was  given  up  to  him 
until  after  Christmas.     O'Donnell  (at  this  time)  caused  his  forces  to  be  mustered 
in  every  place  where  they  were  :  first,  the  Kinel-Connell,  with  all  their  forces, 
came  to  him  ;   and  next  Mac  William   Burke  (Theobald,   the  son  of  Walter 
Kittagh),  with  all  those  who  were  under  his  jurisdiction ;  and  when  these  had 
come  together  to  O'Donnell,  to  Ballymote,  (which  was)  precisely  in  the  end  of 
December,  he  resolved  to  proceed  into  Clanrickard,  although  the  inhabitants  of 
that  territory  were  on  the  alert  and  on  their  guard ;  such  was  their  fear  and 
dread   of  him.     He  marched  silently,  and  arrived  unobserved  at  the  gate  of 
Kilcolgan  by  break  of  day ;  he  then  sent  marauding  parties  in  every  direction 
through  the  level  part   of   Clanrickard  ;   one    party   went   to   the    borders    of 
Oireacht-Redmond,  and  another  to  Dun-Guaire,  in  Coill-Ua-bhFiachrach.     This 
party  who  went  to  Coill-Ua-bh  Fiachrach  committed  lamentable   deeds ;    they 
slew  the  two  sons  of  Ross,  the  son  of  Owny,  son  of  Melaghlin   O'Loughlin, 
i.e.,    Turlough    Boy    and    Brian.       But    a    gentleman    of  the    Clann-Donnell 
Galloglagh,  who  was  along  with    Mac  William    on    that    expedition,  namely, 
Hugh  Boy  Oge,  the  son  of  Hugh  Boy,  son  of  Mulmurry  Mac  Donnell,  had 
been  slain  on  this  occasiou  by  Turlough  Boy,  the  son,  before  he  himself  fell. 
By  another  party  of  O'DonnelPs  people  were  slain  the  two  sons  of  William, 

2  u 


338  STATE  OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1598. 

son  of  John  (Burke)  of  Rinn-Mhil,  and  the  son  of  Theobald,  son  of  Dabuck, 
from  Uoire-Ui-Dhorahnaill,  with  his  brother's  son,  Mac  Hubert  of  Disert- 
Cealaigh,  namely,  William,  the  son  of  Ulick  Roe,  son  of  Ulick  Oge,  was 
taken  prisoner  by  O'Donnell's  brother,  Manus,  son  of  Hugh,  son  of  Manus. 
Although  the  Earl  had  great  numbers  of  hired  soldiers  quartered  in  Clan- 
rickard,  O'Donnell  carried  off  the  immense  spoils,  heavy  herds,  and  other 
booty  and  property,  which  had  been  collected  for  him,  without  battle  or  con- 
flict, until  he  arrived  safe  at  Ballymote." 

26. — Minor  Events. 
In  March,  Murtagh  Cam,  son  of  Conor,  son  of  Mahon,  son  of  Thomas 
Mac  Mahon  of  Cnoc-an-lacna  [Co.  Clare]  died  in  the  territory  of  East  Corca- 
Baiscin  ;  in  Spring  died  Ogan  son  of  John  son  of  Melaghlin  O'h-Ogain  of  Ard- 
Croine.  [A  considerable  portion  of  his  castle  is  still  to  be  seen  at  Ard- 
Crony.]  O'Cahan  (Ruari  son  of  Manus  son  of  Donchadh  son  of  John  son 
of  Aibhne)  died  on  the  14th  of  April,  and  his  son  Donall  Ballach  was  in- 
stalled in  his  place.  Baothghalach,  son  of  Hugh  son  of  Baothghalach,  son 
of  Mortach  Mac  Clanchy,  of  Cnoc-fionn  in  Clare,  died  in  April.  He  was 
fluent  in  the  Latin,  Irish  and  English  tongues.  Dermot,  the  son  of  Edmund, 
son  of  Rury  O'Dea  of  Tully  O'Dea  was  killed  in  the  month  of  July  by  the 
insurgents  of  Clare.  Rickard,  the  son  of  John,  son  of  Thomas,  son  of 
Rickard  Oge  Burke  of  Doire-mic-Lachtna,  died  in  August.  Mac  Donough 
of  Tirerrill  (Maurice  Caech,  the  son  of  Teig-an  Triubhis)  was  slain  in  Briefny- 
O'Rorke,  as  he  was  carrying  off  a  prey ;  upon  which  Conor  Oge,  son  of 
Melachlin  from  Baile-an-duin  was  appointed  the  Mac  Donough.  The  Blind 
Abbot,  (i.e.,  Willian:,  the  son  of  David,  son  of  Edmond,  son  of  Ullick 
Burke)  who  had  styled  himself  McWilliam  after  the  death  of  the  last  lord, 
namely,  Richard,  the  son  of  Oliver,  son  of  John,  did  not  happily  enjoy  his 
title  of  lord,  for  he  was  expelled  from  his  patrimony  by  Sir  Richard  Bingham  ; 
after  which  he  went  about  wandering  as  an  exile  from  territory  to  territory 
until  he  died  in  Clan  Cuilein  (in  Thomond)  in  the  month  of  September ;  and 
he  was  buried  in  the  abbey  of  Quin  in  the  burial  place  of  the  Sil-Aedha  The 
Mc\Villiam,  who  was  lord  at  that  time,  was  Theobald  (the  son  of  Walter 
Kittagh,  son  of  John,  sen  of  Oliver)  whom  O'Donnell  had  nominated 
McWilliam.  Joan  Cam,  the  daughter  of  the  Earl  of  Desmond,  namely  of 
James,  the  son  of  John,  son  of  Thomas  of  Drogheda,  died  in  winter,  having 
spent  many  years  in  widowhood  after  the  destruction  of  her  tribe,  and  the 
worthy  men  to  whom  she  had  been  successively  espoused. y 

*  Annala.  y  Arranged  and  condensed  from  the  Anna/a. 


APPENDIX. 


•339 


Some  original  Letters  written  in  X598. 
1.  Articuli  quidam  cum   Supplicatione  S.  SancF'  nomine  lbernorum  Exulum 
proponcndi* 

Cum  pro  ea,  Sanctissime  Pater,  quam  Ecclesiarum  omnium  ex  officio  geris 
solicitudine,  non  possit  non  esse  gratum  quicquid  per  quoscumque  suggeritur 
opportunum  ad  Religionem  Catholicam  ubivis  locorum  vel  conservandam  vel 
instaurandam  ;  tanto  gratius  sit  oportet  quod  ad  hunc  proponitur  finem,  quanto 
magis  et  ii  qui  proponunt  id  officii  debent  pietati  in  patriam,  et  Sane1""  T.  decet 
id  quod  proponitur  peculiari  quadam  cura  habere  commendatum.  Quoniam 
igitur  impleri  nunc  advertimus  quod  ante  annos  centum  supra  mille  D.  Patricio 
Aplo  nostro  legimus  revelatum  Iberniam  quam  tunc  quidem  ille  in  spiritu  vidit 
totam  inflammatam  christianse  fidei  et  charitatis  ardore,  postea  paulatim  caligine 
et  tenebris  usque  adeo  obducendam,  ut  exiguae  tantum  lucernae  et  rari  tandem 
superessent  carbones  vivi,  iique  cineribus  involuti.  Idcirco  turn  pietate  in 
patriam  moti,  turn  spe  ducti,  quod  (prout  sequuta  habet  revelatio  eidem  Apostclo 
nostro  facta)  ad  splendorem  et  ardorem  pristinum  Ibernia  postliminio  reversura 
sit,  Nos  ad  oscula  pedum  Sanctis  T.  humiliter  prostrati  articulos  quosdam  sive 
puncta  duximus  proponenda,  quorum  consideratione  Sanctas  T.  et  excitari  possit 
ad  ea  propius  et  pressius  cogitanda  quae  ad  salutem  patriae  nostrae  pertinent,  et 
inclinari  merito  ad  id  concedendum,  quod  ad  istum  finem  nos  hie  suppliciter 
petimus. 

Primus  est,  quod  Maiores  nostri,  veteres  Iberniae  Proceres,  tam  insigni  pietate 
ac  singulari  in  Sedem  Apostolicam  observantia  fuisse  commemorentur,  ut  post- 
quam  christianam  religionem  amplexi  semel,  Pontifici  Romano,  Christi  Dni  in 
terris  supremo  Vicario,  non  solum  tanquam  Pastori  totius  Ecclesiae  Christianae 
sese  submiserint,  sed  etiam  Regionis  suae  dominium  et  imperium  cesserint. 

Secundus,  cum  circa  annum  Dni  1170  vicini  Britanni  et  Angli  Iberniam 
invasissent  eamque  armis  imperio  suo  subjicere  molirentur,  Iberni  Proceres  non 
antea  illis  voluerunt  se  submittere  quam  Domini  sui  Romani  Pontificis  inter- 
veniente  auctoritate,  misso  ad  id  in  Iberniam  Legato  Vivesio  quodam,  Rex 
Angliae  inauguraretur  Iberniae  Dominus. 

Tertius,  quamvis  illo  quidem  tempore  expedire  videbatur  ob  multas  causas  ut 
Regi  Angliae  concederetur  dominium  quoddam  protectionis  in  Iberniam,  tamen, 
ex  quo  praesertim  tempore  Henricus  VIII,  Ecclesiae  tandem  rebellis  factus, 
usurpavit  sibi  titulum  Regis  Iberniae,  tam  noxium  est  Ibernis  Anglicani  dominii 
effectum  iugum,  ut  huic  soli  accepto  sit  ferendum,  quod  Ibernia  ab  Ecclesiae 
gremio  per  schisma  sit  avulsa. 

a  From  the  reference  to  Trinity  College  and  to  the  Irish  Jesuits,  this   appears   to   have   been 
written  between  1595  and  1598. 


34°  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1598. 

Quartus,  quod  licet  per  Anglicanae  istius  tyrannidis  vim  et  coactionem 
materialia  passim  templa  in  Ibernia  haereticus  occupet  cultus  et  religio,  tamen 
Ibernorum  animos,  viva  sua  templa,  possideat  Deus,  ut  nulla  sit  in  orbe  Natio 
(modo  nota  illi  aut  nominata  sit  unquam  haeresis)  quae  pauciores  habeat  aut 
infectos  haeresi  aut  ad  earn  affectos.  Et  multi  quidem,  non  obstante  illius 
tyrannidis  terrore  ac  minis,  Catholicam  adhuc  Religionem  constanter  profitentur; 
caeteri  vero  plerique  constantiam  istam  probant  ad  eamque  propendent,  et  quic- 
quid  hie  delinquitur  ex  sufficientis  instructionis  defectu  proficiscitur. 

Quintus,  cum  qui  ex  aliis  nationibus  pro  fide  Citholica  exules  in  Catholicis 
passim  regionibus,  assignata  sibi  habeant  ex  Sedis  Apostolicae  pia  liberalitate 
seminaria  et  scholas,  in  quibus  aluntur,  et  qui  inter  illos  juniores  erudiuntur,  sola 
Ibernia,  proprium  Apostolicae  Sedis  patrimonium,  beneficii  huius  non  est  par- 
ticeps.  Quod  tamen  si  hactenus  percepisset  et  hunc  imprimis  fructum  retulisset, 
quod  submitti  possent  in  Iberniam  (ubi  et  liberius  agerent  quam  in  aliis  quoquo 
modo  infectis  haeresi  et  schismate  regionibus)  qui  instructiores  confirmando  et 
consolando,  rudiores  instruendo,  lapsos  revocando  plurimum  profuissent. 
Deinde  et  alterum  minus  forte  observatum  sed  non  parvi  aestimandum  attulisset 
fructum,  nempe,  ut  qui  Iberni  Romam  petunt,  quippiam  solicitaturi,  non  admit- 
terentur  nisi  habito  ab  eiusmodi  Seminario  Nationis  vitae  suae  et  conversationis 
testimonio  ac  commer.datione. 

Sextus,  cum  Ibernia  olim  fuerit  et  religionis  et  disciplinarum  schola  eiusmodi, 
ut  et  eruditionem  in  istis  accipiendam  soliti  sint  eo  ex  vicinis  regionibus  plurimi 
confluere,  et  ex  ipsa  prodire  multi  ad  religionem  et  eruditionem  in  exteris  pro: 
pagandas  nationibus  —  hac  gloria  paulatim  decidente  sive  per  externorum 
frequentes  et  feroces  in  Iberniam  irruptiones,  et  grassationes,  sive  per  domes- 
ticorum  Principum  civilia  et  intestina  bella,  sive  per  alias  simul  concurrentes 
occasiones  et  causas — certe  Angli,  Iberniae  effecti  Domini,  utcunque  in  principio 
correxerunt  quaedam  a  christianae  religionis  instituto  illic  devia,  postmodum, 
quasi  data  opera,  satagerunt  ut  Ibemos  in  ignorantiae  et  ruditatis  barbara  quadam 
retinerent  caligine,  opportunum  id  ducentes  ad  illos  tanquam  sibi  servos  et 
mancipia  in  subiectione  continendos.  Unde  evenit  ut  Iberni,  religioni  Catholicae 
affectu  pio  alioqui  deditissimi,  non  satis  fuerint  instructi  ad  detegendam  et  repel- 
lendam  illam  in  religione  corruptelam,  quam  aliquot  iam  lustris  Angli  qua 
poterant  vi  et  fraude  conati  sunt  in  Iberniam  invehere. 

Septimus,  cum  etiam  vigente  ad  hue  in  utroque  Angliae  et  Iberniae  Regno 
Catholica  religione,  videbatur  hactenus  caligo  ista  ignorantiae  et  rudidatis  oppor- 
tuna  ad  Ibemos  retinendos  Angliae  subiectos,  ab  uno  iam  vel  altero  anno  alia 
inita  est  ratio  et  consilium,   quo  Anglia,   quae   se  devovit  haeresi,  in   eamdem 


APPENDIX. 


341 


secum  nassam  Iberniam  quoque  trahat,  atque  ita  illam  arctius  sibi  reddat  devinc- 
tam,  nempe  collegii  cuiusdam  ampli  et  magnifici  extructione  iuxta  Dublinium, 
primariam  Iberniae  urbem,  in  quo  a  praeceptoribus  Anglis  haereticis  Juventus 
Ibernica  in  haeresi  instituatur.  Ex  hoc  collegio  et  institutione  magnum  imprimis 
periculum  Ibernis  imminet,  quia  licet  hactenus  affectum  eiusmodi  per  Dei 
gratiam,  et  merita  Sanctorum  suae  gentis,  praesertim  Apostoli  nostri  S.  Patricii, 
erga  Religionem  Catholicam  et  Apostolicam  Sedem  insitum  sibi  ostenderint 
semper,  ut  is  videri  possit  in  nativam  transiisse  dispositionem,  tamen,  quia  flexilis 
valde  eorum  indoles,  timendum  merito,  ne,  deficientibus  qui  de  Catholica  reli- 
gione  instruant,  haeretica  doctrina  serio  seduloque  inculcata  affectum  istum 
immutet,  et  flexilem  indolem  ad  se  rapiat.  Deinde  ex  periculi  hums  con- 
sideratione  tristitia  magna  et  continuus  dolor  cum  nobis  turn  cordatioribus  in 
Ibernia  Catholicis,  eo  quod  illic  desint  idonei  ec  sufflcientes  homines,  qui  in 
Catholica  religione  instruant,  ac  simul  desiderium,  velut  parturientium,  quo 
optamus  eiusmodi  homines  illuc  submitti. 

Quare  Sanctississime  Pater,  Clementissime  Domine  noster,  haec  nostra  et 
populi  nostri,  imo  vero  tui  iure  optimo,  voluntate  paratissima  offerentes  tibi 
vota,  ad  oscula  beatissimorum  tuorum  pedum  prostrati,  imprimis  optamus,  et 
Deum  Opt.  Max.  rogamus,  ut  in  diebus  tuis,  et  in  universo  adimpleatur  mundo 
quod  praedixit  Isaias  :  "  Venient  et  adorabunt  vestigia  pedum  tuorum  qui 
detrahebant  tibi ; "  et  peculiariter  contingat  genti  nostrae,  ut  quam  Henricus 
VIII.  Ecclesiae  rebellis  factus  ab  obedientia  Clementis  Septimi  violenter  avulsit, 
Pastor  bonus  Clemens  Octavus  Ecclesiae  compagi  Iberniam  postliminio  restituat. 
Deinde  rogamus  Clementissimam  T.  Pietatem,  ut  digneris  Articulos  et  rationes 
iam  allatas  attente  considerare,  ut  quae  vel  ex  iis  vel  ex  aliis  quibuscumque  pro 
salute  Iberniae  tuae  Deus  bonus  cordi  tuo  inspiraverit,  ea  pro  T.  Pietate,  pru- 
dentia  et  officio  executioni  mandari  satagas.  Denique  quia,  Clementissimo  Deo 
conservante  nobis  semen,  sunt  nostrates  quidam  e  Societate  Jesu  sacerdotes 
idonei,  qui  in  patria  fructum  faciant  maximum,  obsecramus  humiliter,  ut  sicut  ad 
provincias  alias  ab  haeresi  reducendas,  aut  retinendas  in  Catholica  religione 
aliorum  hactenus  factae  sunt  missiones,  sic  ex  istis  sacerdotibus  ordinentur  aliqui 
in  Iberniam,  albam  ad  messem  region  em,  auspiciis  tuis  mittendi  operarii. 

Sanctitatis  T.  humM1"'  Clientes  Iberni  pro  Catholica  Religione  Exules  hinc 
inde  dispersi. 

Endorsed — Articuli  noie  Hybernorum  S.  Sa  proponendi. 

2. — DeW  III""'  Sig"  Cardinale  Mat  lei  a  N.  R.  P.  Gnrale  da  Ferrara  a  21  di 
Maggio  1598. 

Molto  R  come  fratello.  Diedi  conto  giermatina  alia  s"  di  N.  S.  della  mis- 
sione  che  la  Pla  V"  era  risoluto  di  fare,  quando  cosi  fusse  piaciuto  a  S.  B°°, 


342  STATE   OF   IRELAND    ANNO    1 598. 

d'alcuni  PP.  in  Ibernia  accio  potessero  ivi  fare,  quel  frutto  spirituale  che  dalle 
loro  mani  si  puo  fermamente  sperare.  E  si  come  la  S.  Sta  gradi  multo  cotesta 
buona  volunta  della  P.  V.,  cosi  si  contenta  di  concedere  come  la  a  quei  PP.  che 
da  lei  saranno  inviati  in  quel  Regno,  che  possino  in  esso  essercitare  tutte  le 
faculta  che  da  Sua  B.  sono  state  concesse  o  confermate  ai  PP.  della  Compa  che 
sono  andati  in  Inghilter  e  vuole  Sua  S,a  che  questa  mia  lettera  basti  per 
essecutione  della  presente  concessione. 

3. —  Christopher  Holiwood*  S.  J.  to  F.  Aquxviv.i. 

Admodum  Rde  Pr.      Pax  Chri. 

Gratias  habeo  quantas  maximas  P.  V"  quod  tantam  de  me  curam  dignatus 
est  habere.  Patavium  petam,  Deo  bene  propitio,  proxima  hebdomada,  ibi  facturus 
quod  iubebit  Provincialis  donee  aliter  Paternitas  Vra  disposuerit.  Scriptum  est 
ad  me  nullum  esse  in  Hibernia  qui  habeat  facultatem  dispensandi  cum  Nobilibus 
Catholicis,  ad  hoc  ut  possint,  salva  conscientia,  retinere  bona  Ecclesiastica,  quae 
iam  possident,  donee  Deus  restituat  pacem  Ecclesiae.  Videat  P.  Va  an  expe- 
diat  talem  facultatem  nostros,  qui  mittentur,  habere.  Certe  expedit  Ecclesiae 
sua  hoc  tempore  a  Catholicis  possideri ;  nam  illi  erunt  semper  parati  ea  resti- 
tuere,  et  interim  aliquid  quotannis  pendere  in  pios  usus  insumendum :  quod  si 
omnia  Ecclesiae  bona  ab  haereticis  possiderentur,  id  redderet  ipsorum  con- 
versionem  multo  difficiliorem  et  impedirit  pacem  Ecclesiae,  nee  quicquam 
interim  subsidii  inde  pauperes  acciperent.  Quod  superest,  oro  D.  opt.  max.  ut 
P.  V.  incolumem  et  nostri  memorem  servet.     Mediolani  10  Junii  98. 

P.  V.  servus  in  X.  minimus 

Christophorus  Holivodids. 

Al  m"  Rdoin  Chr°  P.  il  Padre  Claudio 

Aquaviva  Gnale  della  Compa  di  Giesu  a  Roma. 

4. — Letter  of  J.  Archer?  S.J.  Aug.  10,  1598. 

Rdo  in  X°  P.  Claudio  Aquaviva,  Praeposito  G"  Societatis  Jesu,  Romae, 
Admodum  Rde  in  X°  Pater,  Pax  Christi,  etc. 

Quas  t.  p.  ad  me  dedit  14  Martii,  has  ego  non  ante  Calendas  Augusti  accepi, 
etsi  ad  patrem  Henricum  Fitz  Symons  tribus  ante  mensibus  pervenerint,  unde 
facile  perspicere  potest  occasionem  tanti  silentii.  A  tempore  quo  hue  perveni 
in  tantis  angustiis  versatus  sum,  ut  nihil  de  ratione  mittendi  per  Angliam 
didicerim,  quam  p.  Fitz  Simons,  quem  ad  horulam  tantum  vidi,  me  docuerit. 
Per  Hispaniam  plures  misi  cum  pecuniis  ad  studiosos,  et  nullum  omnino  respon- 
sum  accepi.  Unde  hoc  provenerit  non  aliter  conjicere  possum,  quam  quod 
mercatores  nostri  literas  ad  me  vel  ex  me  transferre  vereantur,  eo  quod  status  hie 
maximo  me  prosequatur  odio,  et  frequenti  indagine,  magno  proposito  pretio,  me 

b  Of  Artane  Castle,  Dublin.  c  Of  Kilkenny. 


APPENDIX. 


343 


perquirat,  ita  ut  in  sylvis  et  latebris  ut  plurimum  again,  et  regredi  ad  meos  non 
liceat  eo  quod  mercatores  in  suas  me  recipere  naves  non  audeant,  quod  certo 
sciant  quosdam  in  quolibet  portu  a  statu  designatos  qui  me  opperiantur. 

Attamen  Societatis  munia,  prout  possum,  exercere  non  desisto  ;  bis  mille 
confessiones...excepi  ;  incultos  et  barbaros  in  fide  instruxi  ;  quosdam,  abiurata 
haeresi,  Ecclesiae  reconciliavi,  et  personam  unam  nobilem,  quae,  ablegata 
coniuge,  scortum  introduxerat,  unde  maxima  dissensio  inter  principes  viros 
oriebatur,  cum  ilia  in  gTatiam  redire  feci ;  sacramenta  in  Castris  ministravi 
quandoquidem  cum  subditis  in  Civitatibus  versari  non  sit  permissum.  Mirum 
est  quantus  erat  concursus  ex  vicinis  locis  ut  Sacrum  audirent  et  peccatis 
expiarentur  ;  hinc  facile  conjicere  potest  t.  p.  quanta  sit  spes  uberrimi  fructus  si 
plures  e  Societate  mittantur. 

De  Missione  cum  nobi/ibus,  praesertim  aquilonaribus,  egi,  qui  earn  valde 
expetunt,  et  maxime  opus  habent,  homines  inculti,  barbari  et  plane  rudes  ;  reli- 
giosos  tamen  plurimum  respiciunt.  I  Hi  omnem  operam  et  solicitudinem  et 
praedia  quaedam  illis  designare  pollicentur.  Ex  hac  parte,  valde  inculta, 
"excursiones  ad  reliquas  cum  maiore  securitate  et  fructu  fieri  poterunt.  Alii  in 
parte  australi  missionem  quidem  exoptant,  patrocinium  patrum  assumere  publice 
non  audent,  sed  fovere,  et  procurare  ut  nihil  illis  desit  non  renuunt.  Maior 
modo  spes  est  uberioris  fructus  quam  hactenus  ob  frequentes  Catholicorum 
victorias,  unde  fit  ut  haeretici  ex  multis  locis  migrare  cogantur. 

De  reformatione  Cleri  tota  difficultas  erit  ob  eorum  audaciam  et  inscitiam 
...Quapropter  opus  erit  ut  qui  mittantur  amp/am  habeant  Jurisdictionem,  quam 
solam  illi  respiciunt  et  reverentur,  ad  coercendam  eorum  insolentiam.  Ex  eorum 
restauratione  tota  res  pendet,  quod  ego  compertum  habeo,  ex  eo  quod  quidam 
Cornelius  Stanle  Vic.  Aposcus  obnixe  me  rogavit,  cum  hue  venirem  ut  illi  assist- 
erem  in  executione  sui  muneris  in  spiritualibus ;  cui  eo  lubentius  assensum 
praebui,  quod  sperabam  inde  maiorem  Dei  gloriam  et  ingens  animarum  lucrum, 
ut  res  ipsa  testatur \  brevi  namque  tempore  decern  sacerdotes,  ablegatis  concu- 
binis  et  schismate  abiurato,  ad  meliorem  frugem  redegi ;  quod  sane  efficere  non 
possem  nisi  fultus  auctoritate  et  iurisdictione  illius.  Praeterea  ad  securitatem 
conscientiarum  illius  nomine  dispensavi  cum  quibusdam  Catholicis  pro  fructibus 
Ecclesiasticis,  ab  Haereticis  perceptis,  componendo  cum  illis  pro  quota  aliqua 
solvenda  in  subsidium  Seminarii  Hybemorum  Salmanticae,  quorum  gratia  hue 
missus  sum.  In  qua  re  non  existimo  me  quicquam  fecisse  adversus  Societatis 
institutum,  et  quod  non  sit  gratum  Deo,  et  t.  p.  acceptum,  cui  in  omnibus,  ut 
semper,  meum  subjicio  judicium.     Quod  si  liceret  mihi  accedere  ad  Superiores, 


344  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1 598. 

nec  illud  ipsurn  sine  ipsorum  iussu  acceptarem ;  enixe  rogo  t.  p.  ut  nihil  mali  de 
me  suspicetur  in  hac  nec  alia  re  ex  relatu  aliorum,  qui  parum  de  me  aut  meis 
actionibus  compertum  habent.  Dicere  non  possem  quantum  rei  Christianae 
proficerem,  si  liceret  mihi  inter  hominos  publice  versari,  quod  spero  aliis  fore 
permissum  eo  quod  cum  adversariis  nunquam  sint  versati,  ut  ego  in  Flandria  et 
alibi,  nec  eorum  nomina  statim  sint  cognita.  Iter  in  Hispaniam  cogito  prima 
occasione  ex  septentrionali  parte,  quo  antea  pervenire  non  potui,  omnibus  viis 
interclusis.  Haec  sunt,  Rde  Pater,  quae  de  me  et  de  missione  scribere  pro 
ratione  temporis  potui;  t.  p.  inveniet  me  semper  fidelem,  humilem  etobedientem 
Societatis  filium.     Raptim  ex  Castris  10  Augusti  98. 

t.  P.  servus  in  X°  minimus, 

Jacobus  Archerus. 
5. — Nicholas  LcnichA  S.  J.  to  Fr.  Duras,  Sep.  25,  1598. 

Ihus 
Pax.  X.  Quoniam  intelligo  R.  V™"  cupidam  esse  aliquid  andiendi  ex  multis, 
quae  Deus  Opt.  et  Max.,  opera  et  industria  nostrorum  patrum,  in  Hybernia 
operatur,  ideo  non  immerito  existimavi  ad  R.  V.  mittere  eo  quae  accepi  ex  literis 
Patricii  Hamlii,  sacerdotis  et  olim  alumni  huius  Seminarii,  scriptis  ex  Hybernia 
12  Calendas  Julii  huius  praesentis  anni,  ex  Anglico  idiomate  quantum  ego  potui 
Latino  donatis. 

Haud  facile  dictu  est,  quantus  in  his  locis  fructus  constiterit  ex  opera  Patris 
Tacobi  Archeri,  uberior  procul  dubio  futurus,  nisi  unum  illud  obstaret  quod  ex- 
ploratores  a  Prorege  constituti  iam  inde  a  primo  Patris  in  Hyberniam  ingressu, 
in  eum  diligenter  inquirebant :  usque  adeo  ut  ab  hominum  oculis,  in  quibus 
versabatur,  in  latebras  sibi  confugiendum  putaret :  in  quibus  moratus  tantum 
temporis,  quantum  satis  esset  ad  sui  memoriam  abolendam,  rursus  intermissa 
studia  instauravit,  hodieque  Societatis  munia  ita  exequitur,  ut  ad  fidem 
Catholicam  magnus  haereticorum  fiat  accessus.  Hie  est  alius  ex  eadem  Societate 
sacerdos  e  Flandria  appulsus,  cui  nomen  est  Henrico  Simonio,*  qui  non  minori 
cum  fructu  animarum  saluti  operatur,  Deo  illius  conatus  favente  ;  nam  singulis 
quibusque  festis  ac  Dominicis  diebus  frequentem  ad  populum  concionatur,  tanto 
cum  animi  ardore  ut  suimet  ac  suarum  rerum  oblitus  videatur.  Multi  ab  haeresum 
coeno  ad  Christianae  religionis  splendorem  convertuntur :  utque  alios  prae- 
termittam  verae  fidei  communionem  ingressos,  Dublinii,  in  urbe  totius  Regni 
metropoli,  ubi  Prorex  sedem  tenet,  centum  omnino  sunt,  qui  praeterito  anno 
circa  festum  Paschatis  resurrectionis  pravo  haereticorum  more,  rituque  perverso 
communicarunt  :  iidem  tandem  christianae  doctrinae  rudimentis  probe  instructi, 

*  Of  Clonmel.  •  H.  Fitz  Simon,  of  Dublin. 


APPENDIX.  345 

apud  Patrem  anteactae  vitae  maculas  confessione  eluerunt ;  vita^que  coelestis 
Sacramento  refecti,  tantum  pietatis  specimen,  fluentibus  abundanter  lacrimis, 
praebuerunt,  ut  omnes  in  admirationem  darentur.  Ne  tamen  propter  insolentem 
multitudinem  turbae  fierent,  non  omnes  uno  die  sacrum  X'  Corpus  exceperunt  ; 
sed  in  duos  bipartiti,  priori  sexageni  posteriori  vero  quadrageni :  qua  in  re 
videre  erat  pium  illorum  certamen  contendentium,  utri  prius  divinum  illud  con- 
vivium  degustarent.  Huius  rei  novitas  fuit  omnibus  tam  iucunda,  ut  multos 
dies  nullus  nisi  de  ilia  sermo  haberetur,  singulis  immortales  gratias  Deo  agenti- 
bus,  quod  ab  errorum  tenebris  in  lucem  veritatis  traducti  essent :  unde  prae- 
cipuus  in  Deum  honor  et  in  Catliolicorum  coetus  utilitas  redundabat.  Cum 
vero  Catliolicorum  numerus  in  dies  augeretur,  Patri  visum  fuit  nobili  in  domo** 
aram  collocare,  quo  Catholici  confluentes  divinis  rebus  interessent.  Quare,  ut 
maiorem  in  omnium  animis  ad  pietatem  affectum  excitaret,  aulam  peristro- 
matis  excoluit,  tapetibus  instravit,  et  in  medio  aram  posuit  rebus  omnibus  ad 
sacrificandum  tam  eleganter  instructam,  ut  nulli  cederet  earum  quae  in  istis 
locis  instructissimae  visuntur.  Curavit  insuper,  ut  res  divina  cum  omni  vocum 
nervorumque  concentu  celebraretur ;  itaque,  organa  si  excipias  nullum  ferme  ex 
musicis  instrumentis  requisieris  :  nablia,  cytharae,  testudines,  et  siqua  reliqua 
sunt,  iucundissimam  commiscebant  harmoniam.  Prius  tamen  quam  Sacrum 
solemni  fieret  apparatu  ter  celebratum  est  planiori  ritu,  et  quidem  sine  ullo  cantu 
vocum,  non  tamen  affectionqm,  quae,  in  omnium  animis  adversus  Deum 
mirabiliter  incensae,  Dei  coelitumque  aures  pertingebant ;  quippe  in  singulis 
Sacrifices  Catholici  bene  multi  coelesti  pane  pasti  et  incredibili  divinae  con- 
solationis  dulcedine  perfusi,  ita  ut  pro  votis  nunquam  satis  Deo  gratias 
decantarent.  Stato  Missae  tempore  de  rebus  divinis  Pater  sermonem  instituit 
tanta  cum  utilitate  audientium  quanta  maxima  esse  poterat.  Argumento  [est] 
quod  demisso  sacro  plurimos  in  sodalitatem  B.  Mariae  cooptaverit,  quae  ab 
eodem  patre  instituta  tam  ibi  quam  apud  alias  primi  ordinis  familias  magna 
cum  Sodalium  frequentia  efflorescit.  Hinc  facile  erit  intelligere  quanta  laetitia 
omnium  mentes  eo  die  compleverit,  siquidem  quadraginta  abhinc  annis  hoc 
primum  Sacrum  solemni  ritu  peractum  audierunt :  quae  omnia  conjicienda 
potius  relinquo  ac  meditanda,  esset  enim  opus  immensum  singula  literis  com- 
plecti  quae  de  horum  Catliolicorum  pietate  ac  perseverantia  scriptu  digna 
videbantur. 

Pater,  ut  omnium  saluti  consulat,  varios  quoquoversum  excursus  efficit, 
adeo  quidem  prompto  animo  et  expedito,  ut  sibimet  omnem  quiescendi  facul- 
tatem  adimat,  tanto  flagrat  desiderio  suos  adiuvandi  concives.     Quacumque  iter 

**  Probably  Thomas  Fagan's.     See  Fitz  Simon's  Letter,  infra. 

2  X 


346  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1598. 

vel  moram  facit,  statim  de  Deo  sermones  serit,  patresfamilias  de  rebus  docet, 
quae  ad  reliquum  vitae  spatium  in  Dei  amore  ac  timore  transigendum  re- 
quiruntur.  Illi  praeceptis  illius  obediunt,  mandataque  cum  sedulitate  exequuntur, 
ut  merito  eos  dicas  ad  Christianam  pietatem  ex  ammo  proclives  atque  pro- 
pensos  esse.  Praeterea  duodecim  pueros  bene  morigeratos,  spectataeque  indolis 
et  ingenii  collegit  in  Flandriam  mittendos,  una  cum  aliquot  virginibus,  quae  se 
Deo  perpetua  virginitate  devoverunt,  ut  suum  nomen  consecrent  alicui  familiae 
Deo  sacrae  :  nunc  idoneam  navigandi  tempestatem  Dublinii  praestolantur,  quam 
fortunatissimam  praecamur. 

Igitur,  Pater  amantissime,  si  viginti  habuerimus  e  Societate  brevi  temporis 
spatio  [ab]  eis  tota  Hybernia  ad  veram  fidem  compelletur :  cui  nihilo  magis 
quam  via?  duce  opus  est.  Quapropter  cures  diligenter  oportet  ut  quotquot  e 
Societate  nostra  Hibernico  aut  Anglico  sermone  utentur  hue  mittantur,  suam 
hisce  populis  operam  daturi,  qui  indies  salutis  suae  avidiores  existunt.  Interim 
unum  illud  admonitum  te  volo  eos  omnes  in  Regno  impune,  libereque  vagaturos, 
nemine  eorum  labores,  exercitationesque  perturbante.  Denique  ut  scribendi 
finem  faciam  perstringo  breviter  quod  nuper  cum  haerelicorum  ministris  Patri 
contigit.  Prorex  certior  factus  de  iis  quae  a  patribus,  turn  praesertim  a  p. 
Henrico  agebantur,  publicam  fidem  pactus  eum  ad  certamen  cum  suis  ministris 
de  rebus  divinis  palam  ineundum  invitavit.  Strenuus  Christi  miles  non  recu- 
savit  congressum,  ad  pugnam  descendit.  Illi,  patrem  ut  agnoscunt,  obstupescere  ; 
periculum  vereri,  negare  insuper  cum  Jesuitis  Seminariorumque  alumnis 
(quos  nihilo  differre  putant)  veluti  cum  impostoribus  rem  gerendam :  imo 
affirmare  nefas  esse  quovis  praesidio  illorum  studia  fovere.  Itaque  fugere  ante  pug- 
nam quam  post  illam  victi  discedere  maluerunt :  hinc  eo  maiorem  ignominiae 
notam  subierunt,  quo  insolentius  antea  iactitabant,  neminem  esse  in  toto  orbe, 
nedum  in  Hybernia,  qui  posset  suos  inter  disputandum  impetus  sustinere. 

Catholici  rem  divinam  audituri  armis  se  muniunt,  quibus  se  ac  sacerdotes 
tueantur.  Antea  enim  haereticorum  ministri  quamplures  exploraverunt  domos, 
siqua  ornamenta  vestiendis  altaribus  et  sacerdotibus  accommodata  invenirent, 
inventa  abstulerunt ;  nunc  vero  in  idem  periculum  se  inferre  non  audent, 
metuentes  ne  ubi  velint  quaestum  facere  sumptum  faciant.  Et  haec  breviter  ex 
Uteris  Patricii  Hamlii. 

Quid  ergo  praestolamur,  pater  amantissime,  et  cur  stamus  tota  die  otiosi, 
siquidem  Deus  nos  conducat  in  vineam  suam,  vineam  iam  maturam  ad  messem; 
age  igitur,  pater  mi,  age  inquam,  ut  quam  cito  plures  amandentur  operarii,  ut 
semen  hoc  in  horreum  Domini  reponatur  antequam  pereat,  devasteturque,  et 
summis  a  V.    R.    precibus     contendo,    ut   me   indignum  et   inutilem    servum 


APPENDIX. 


347 


dignetur  inter  caeteros  huius  sanctae  et  felicis  missionis  nominare,  nam  tanto 
temporis  intervallo  turn  a  N.  R.  P.  turn  a  praedecessor  j  R.  V.  illam  expos 
tulavi.  Valeat  R.  V.  in  X.  Jesu,  et  me  [tuis]  piis  sacrificiis  devotisque 
precibus  me  committo.  Ex  Collegio  D.  Antonii  Ollyssipone  25  Septembris 
1598. 

R.  Vae  fr.  et  servus  in  X°.  Nicolaus  Lenich. 
Rd°  in  Christo  Patri,  Patri  Georgio    Duras   Assistenti   Societatis   Jesu  hae 
dentur. 

Endorsed — Fiat  extractum  et  exhibeatur  lllmo  Protectori. 

6. — H.  Fitz  Simon  to  F.  General  Aguaviva,  Nov.  25. 
Admodum  R.  P.     Pax  Xs.      Nihil  mihi  in  votis  prius  est   quam  ut   quae- 
cumque  circa  nos  gerantur  intelligatis ;  sed  mora  est  a  tabellariis,   omnia  enim 
commercia  hac  rerum   perturbatione  cessarunt  ut  litems    mittefe  aut    recipere 
non  sit  facile.     Adversarii  congressum  refugiunt  non  sine  eofum  confusione  et 
gaudio    Catholicorum.      Multas  insidias    instruxerunt,  quas  divina   providentia 
evasi,  comprehensis  cum  ego    evaderem   aliis.     Dublinia  est    primaria    civitas 
in  qua  tribunal  regium  et  proregis  sedes,  et  haereticorum   sentina^  altera  plane 
Londinia.     Hanc  a  sacerdotibus  prodendam  Senatui  inculcant  Angli  Justiciarii 
et  iureiurando  conformant,  fecerunt  fidem  adeo  ut  fratrem  frater  proderet  duos 
producendo   sacerdotes,  utque   senatus  mulctam  gravissimam  proponeret   qui- 
buscumque   sacerdotes   foventibus,    evolant  omnes   deserentes    cathoiicissimam 
civitatem.     Hie  exitus  fuit,  ut  insontes  probati  sint  sacerdotes  et  audaciores  facti 
Catholici  ad  terrores  hujusmodi  perferendos.     Ego  autem  ab  iis  praemonitus  fui 
quorum  intererat  perscrutari  aedes,  quamvis  vix  satis  mature,  cum   non  prius 
efferrem  pedes  quam  adessent  inquisitores.  Tota  aestate  varias  obivi  regni  partes 
non  sine  operae  praetio,  sex  revocatis  haereticis,   plurimisque    schismaticis,   et 
auditis   confessionibus   ingenti   numero.      Singulis  festis  concionem  habeo,   ad 
quam  confluunt  a  vigesimo  milliari  non  pauci  non  sine  optato  in  aliquot  fructu. 
Jam  autem  excurrere  non  licet  absque  manifesto  vitae  periculo,  ita  digrassantur 
hostes,  qui  quamvis  catholicos  se  [iae]  ctitent,  non  tamen  aliud  praeter   nomen 
habent,  nee  ferunt  qui  a  nequitia   coerceant,  aut  qui  inscitiam  corrigant ;  sic 
enim  rapinis  incumbunt,  ut  timeam  praecipuam  eas  insurrectioni  dedisse  ansam, 
et  non  aliud  militibus  manere  stipendium.      Arcerius  noster  tandem  ad  vos  dat 
litems,  utinam  perquas  se  purget.     Implicuit  enim  se  officio  Vicarii    Generalis, 
ejus  fultus  auctoritate  qui  dubiam  habebat  potestatem  quam   etiam  alteri   con- 
tulerat.     Inde  magna  confusio,  tantaque  utqui  ejus    usi  sunt  opera  in  dispen- 
sationibus  aliisque  id  [generis]*  incerti  sint  omnium.     Ego  sane  nee  augeo  nee 

«  Corroded.  *  d  is  eaten,  i  and  g  are  clear;    possibly  the  word  was  "  negotiis." 


348  STATE   OF   IRELAND   ANNO    1 598. 

minuo  eius  auctoritatem  cum  nihil  de  V.  R.  voluntate  habeam  compertum.  Id 
enixe  supplico  V.  P.,  ut  collectionum,  quas  ex  tota  corrasit  Ibernia,  aequi  pars 
Duacensibus  Ibernis  statuatur,  qui  flos  studiosorum  nostratium,  et  quorum 
intuitu  potiorem  partem  obtinuit.  Ideo  hoc  requiro,  quod  privatis  suis,  Sal- 
manticae,  nimium  studere  passim  judicetur. 

Cum  opinione  omnium,  et  ipsorum  expectatione  haereticorum,  diversa  totius 
reipublicae  futura  facies  et  conditio  sit,  consulere  divino  honori,  aliqua  Eccle 
siastica  beneficia  praeoccupando,  debemus.     Tria  autem  nostris  usibus  accom- 
modatissima  animadverti.     Primum  Thomae  Courtum  in  ipsa  Dublinia,  quod 
aliquando  Canonicorum    Regularium  fuit :  secundum  Abbatia  S,,ieMariae     quod 
Bernardinorum  :  tertium  Kilmainam  quod  equitum  Melitensium.     Haec   etiam 
posteriora   duo   in   ambitu    Dublinensi   continentur.     Si    impetremus    primum, 
partem  fructuum  etiamnum  ad  nostros  usus  consequemur.  Quod  sane  opus  est, 
cum   recepto  more   nihil    sacerdotibus    erogetur   praeter    oblationes    tempore 
Sacrificii,   et  victum.     Quare,   salvo  meliore  iudicio,  soli  illi  in  principio  hue 
mittendi   sunt   quibus   vel   patrimonium   vel    amnitas    ampla.      Quantum    ad 
externa  nova,  tota  haec  patria  licet  non  subiaceat  proceribus  qui  insurrexerunt 
eorum   tamen   incursionibus  prostituitur ;    pervolant  enim  impune,  non  minus 
bonorum  quam  malorum  bona  diripientes.     Ex  iuvenibus  qui  Duaci  studuerunt 
cum  unus  in  eos  improvide  incidisset,  quod  se  Henricum  Fitz  Simon  diceret, 
habitus  est  benigne,  dein  dimissus.     Venerantur  externo  cultu  omnia  veneranda, 
sed  opera  eorum  longe  a  Deo.     Cum  [ed*]ictum  vetaret  omnes,  non  exciperent 
sacerdotes,  mihi  quamplurima  diversoria  patuerunt.     Magna  et periculosa  lis  inter 
tres  primates   falsis  rumoribus  exoriebatur,  quae  omnes  ad  sanguinem  mutuo 
effundendum  protrahebat,  iamque  facinus  patrandum  erat  cum  nocturno  itinere 
veredariis  equis  ad  auctorem  percurrendo,  eumque  ad  palinodiam  recinendum 
inducendo  malum  diuino  beneficio  averterim.     Feci,  in  aliis  Societatis  functioni- 
bus,  quidquid   potui :   minutiora  per  se  concipiantur.     De  facultatibus  verbum 
nullum,  deque  erecta  a  me  sub  ratihabitione  sodalitate.    Omni  animi  demissione 
vestras  efflagito  sive  consolatorias  in  aestu  laborum,  sive  mandatorias  in  finibus 
terrae  ut  sim   semper  obedientiae  Alius.     Denique  pari  conatu  contendo,  ut 
insignis  benefactor  noster,   Dominus   Thomas  Faganus  precibus  totius  Societatis 
extraordinariis  commendetur,  et  significatione  gratae  acceptionis  a  V.  Rtia  hono- 
retur.     Meipsum  eisdem,  ut  unico  micro  tanto  instantius  committo,  quanto  longius 
absum   ab  influentiis   caeterorum   membrorum,    quan  toque   pluribus    obnoxius 
periculis.     Ex  Ibernia  25  Novembris  1598. 

V.  RUae  tam  promtus  in  X°  servus  quam  humilis  Alius — 

Henricus  Fitz  Simon. 

•  Corroded. 


APPENDIX. 


349 


PARLIAMENTARY  LISTS  OF   THE  YEARS   1560,=   i58s,b  AND   1613. 


Lords. 


1560.  1585. 


Earl  of  Kildare      2d  1st 

Earl  of  Ormond  and  Ossory  1st  2d 

Earl  of  Desmond     3rd  — 

Earl  of  Tyreone    3rd 

Earl  of  Clanricard     5th  4th 

Earl  of  Tomond  4th  5th 

Earl  of  Clancare  6th 

ViscountButtyvant        6th  7  th 

ofFfermoy    7th  8th 

Gormanston 10th  9th 

Baltinglass     nth  — 

Mountgarrett 12th  16th 

LordBermingham  ofAthenry    8th  nth 

Coursy    9th  12th 

ofSlane      14th  13th 


Lords. 


1560.    1585. 


Lord  of  Delvin      13th  14th 

of  Killeen     15th  15th 

Howth  16th  16th 

Dunsany    19th  17th 

Trimleteston     17th   18th 

Lixnaw  or  Kerry 18th      — 

Dunboyne 20th  18th 

Upper  Ossory  23rd  20th 

Louth    2 1  st    2 1  st 

Curraghmore 22d     22d 

Donganyne   —    23rd 

Inchecoyne  — ■    24th 

Burk  of  Connell  ■ —     25th 

Cahir —     26th 


Shires — 1560. 


1585. 


Dublin— Fitz  Williams  de  Holmpatrick  R.  Netterville 
Finglas  de  Waspellistown  Burnell 


Meath — Sir  Christopher  Chever 

P.  Barnwall  de  Stackallan 
Kildare — Eustace  de  Cradokeston 

Flattesburie  de  Johnstown 
Westmeath — Sir  G.  Stanley 
Sir  T.  Nugent 
Wexford — Hore  de  Harperstown 

Rd  Synnot  de  Ballybrenan 
Louth — Taf  de  Ballebragane 

Dowdal  de  Glasspistell 
South  Louth     ... 

Carlo w— Sir  W.  Fitz  Williams 

Edmund  Butler 
Kilkenny— White,  Gall 

Tipperary — Sherlock,  Grace 


R.  Barnwall 

J.  Netterville 

W.  Sutton 

E  Fitz  Morric 

Nugent  de  Disert 

Nugent  de  Morton 

Fitz  Henry 

Codd 

Gerlone 

More 


Sir  H.  Wallop 

G.  Ffenton 

Blanchville 

Rothe 

Butler 

Everard 


1613. 

Sir  C.  Plunket 
Lutteral  of  Lutterels- 

town 
Hussey,     Baron 

Gallrim 
R.  Barnwall 
Talbot  of  Carton 
Sutton  of  Tipper 
C.  Nugent 
E.  Nugent 
Furlong  of  Horetown 
Wadding 


Verdon  of  Clonmore 

Gernon  of  Strabane 

Bagnal 

M.  Cavenagh 

Grace 

Shee 

Butler  of  Kilcash 

Sir  J.  Everard 


»  Compiled  from  Hardiman's  Statute  of  Kilkenny,  p.  135,  140. 
Meehan's  Fate  and  Fortunes  of  O'Neill,  p.  522. 


Arranged  from  Rev.  P.  J. 


35o 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Shires— 1560. 
Cross  of  Tipperary 

Waterford — Power  of  Comshen 

P.  Aylward  of  Faithlick 
Cork 


Kerry    . . . 

Limerick 

Clare       , 

Down   . . . 

Antrim 

Armagh 

King's  Co; 

Queen's  Co. 

Connacie 
Longford 

Galway 

Mayo    ... 

Roscommon 

Sligo     ... 

Ferns    . . . 
Wicklow 

Cavan  ... 
Coleraine 


1585. 

Archbold 

Prindergast 

R.  Ailward 

Sherlock 

J.      Norries,      L. 

President 
Cogan  Fitz  Edmond 
Fitz  Gerald 

Springe 

T.  Norris 

R«  Bourk 

Sir  Tir.  O'Brene 

Boetius  Clanchy 

Sir  H.  Bagnell 

Sir  Hugh  Magennis 

Berkly 

Sha.  M'Brien 


Sir  G.  Bourchier 
A.  Waringe 
Warham  S'  Leger 
Harpoll 

Ffaghny  O'Fferrall 

Wm  O'Fferrall 

Le  Straunge 

Fr   Shane 

Williams 

Brown 

Sir  R  Bingham 

Dillon 

Sir  V.  Brown^ 

Crofton,  and 

Marbury 

Masterson 

Synnot 

Brabazon 

Sir  H.  Harrington 

Philip  O'Reilly 
Ed.  O'Reilly 


1613. 

Butler  of  Cloghcully 
Laffan  of  Greystown 
Sir  J.  Gough 
Power  of  Campier 
M'Carthy  of  Logher 

Barrett 

O'Sullevan  of  Dono- 

lough 
Rice  of  Ballinruddall 
Sir  F.  Barkley 
Sir  T.  Brown 
D.  O'Brien 
Berty  Clancye 
Sir  J.  Hamilton 
Sir  H.  Montgomery 


Sir  T.  Caulfield 
Sir  J.  Bourchier 
Sir  F.  Ruish 
Sir  A.  Loftus 
Sir  H.  Power 
Sir  R.  Piggott 

Connell  O'Ferrall 
John  O'Ferrall 
Sir  W.  Bourke 
J.  More 

Sir  Theo.  Burke 
Sir  Tho.  Burke 
Sir  O.  S"  John 
Sir  J  King 
O'Hara 
M'Donogh 


Byrne  of  Tynepark 
Phelim    Mc    Pheagh 

Byrne 
Sir  O.  Lambert 
Fish 
Baker 
Rowlev 


APPENDIX. 

Shires — 1560. 

1585. 

1613. 

Donegal 





Vaughan 
Steward 

Fermanagh 





Sir  H.  Folliot 
Sir  J.  Davis 

Lei  trim... 





Nugent 
Reynolds 

Monaghan 



Sir  E.  Blakeny 
Sir  B.  McMahon 

Tyrone 

... 

... 

Sir  T.  Ridgway 
Sir  F.  Roe 

Cities — 

1560. 

Dublin 

Stanihurst... 

Taylor 

Bolton 

Golding 

Ball 

Barry 

Waterford 

Wise         

Sir  P.  Walsh 

Sherlock 

Strong       

N.  Walsh 

Wadding 

Cork     

J.  Miagh 

J.  Miagh 

E.  Tirry 

Coppinger 

Sarsfield 

D.  Tirry 

Limerick 

Fanning    ... 

T.  Arthur 

Galwey 

E.  Arthur 

White 

N.  Arthur 

Borough  Towns. 

Drogheda 

Weston     ... 

Barn  wall 

Blackney 

Burnell     

Nugent 

Beeling 

Galway 

Jonoke  Lynch 

Pe.  Lynch 

Sir  W.  Blake 

Pe.  Lynch 

Jo.  Lynch 

G.  Lynch 

Knockfergus    ... 

Wingfield... 

Hibbots 

Waren 

Johnson 

Youghill 

Walsh       

T.  Coppinger 

E.  Coppinger 

Portyngall 

Collen 

Forrest 

Kilkenny 

Bethe       

Roche 

Archer 

Archer 

Shee 

Langton 

Wexford 

Hassane  ... 

Pa.  Furlong 

Turner 

Rd  Talbot            „. 

Pa.  Talbot 

R'  Talbot 

Ross     

Heron 

Duff 

Fitz  Henry 

Dormer... 

Bennett 

Shee 

Down  ... 

Armagh 



Ussher 
Conway 

Kinsale 

Sir  J.  Alen 

Galwey 

J.  Roche 

Agarde     ... 

Roche 

D.  Roche 

Dundalk 

C.  More   ... 

Bellew 

Cashel 

Stanley 

Bath 
J.  More 

Ellis 

351 


352 


STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 


Borough  Towns — 1560. 

1585. 

1613. 

Trim 

...Sir  J.  Parker 

Hamon 

Ashe 

P.  Martell 

Gwire 

Jones 

Cashel 

... 

Conway 

Hale 

Pa.  Kerney 

Sale 

Fethard    ... 

...Hacket     

Nash 

Everard 

T.  Nasshe 

Wale 

Hackett 

Clonmel   ... 

...Stridche    .. 

G.  White 

N.  White 

H.  White 

Bray 

Bray 

Kilmallock 

Verdon 

Verdon 

Hurley 

Kearney 

Thomastown 

...Cosby 

Sherlock 

Robook 

Cowlye 

Porte 

Porter 

Le  Naas  ... 

...Draicot     ... 

Ja.  Sherlock 

Latten 

Jo.  Sherlock 

Lewes 

C.  Sherlock 

Ennestyock 

... 

Power 

W"  Murphy 

Archdeacon 

Crichen  Murphy 

Kildare 

...Abelles     

Wesly 

Fitz  Gerald 

More         

Shirgold 

Farbeck 

Mullingar 

...N.  Casy 

Pettit 

N.  Casy 

Relyng 

R.  Casy 

Hamon 

Athenry 

...A.  Brown... 

Brown 

S.  Brown 

Sir  T.  Cusack 

Lynch 

Bodkin 

Carlingford 

...Radclief 

Ap  Hugh 

Whitechurch 

Jo.  Neile 

R.  Neil 

Hope 

Navan 

...R.  Waring 

Wakely 

Begg 

Jo.  [Wakel]y 

Waringe 

Warren 

Athboy     .. 

...More         

Brown 

More 

Blake        

Terrell 

Browne 

Kelles       .  . 

...Shiele        

Fleming 

Plunkett 

Ledwiche... 

Dax 

Balfe 

Ardee 

...W.  Dowdall 

Barnwall 

Mathewe 

Babe         

J.  Dowdall 

P.  Dowdall 

Dengenchoishe 

• . •                                    ...                   ... 

T.  Trant 

Trant 

J.  Trant 

Hussey 

Dungarvan 

...GifFord     

obliterated 

Roe 

Chellyner... 

Fitzharris 

Callan      ... 

... 

Quemerford 

Rothe 

Branan 

Haydon 

Philipstown 

... 

Frehan 

Leycester 

Williams 

Phillips 

Maryborough 

obliterated 

Sir  A.  Loftus 
Barrington 

Swords 

obliterated 

Blackney 
Fitz  Simons 

Athy 

...Mothill     

Sir  R.  Digby 

Cussvn 

Weldon 

APPENDIX. 


353 


Borough  Towns— 1613. 


Charlemont 
Antrim... 
Belfast  ... 
Coleraine 

Deny  ... 
Carlow... 
Cavan  ... 


Belturbet 
Ennis   ... 
Limavaddy 
Mallow 
Baltimore 
BandonBridge... 
Cloghnakilty    ... 
University        of 

Dublin 
New  Castle,  near 

Lyons 
Donegal 
Lifford 

Bally  shannon   ... 
Downpatrick   ... 
Newry... 
Bangor 

Killileagh 


More.     Fortescue. 
Conway.     Hill. 
Sir  J.  Blennerhasset. 
Trevelyan.  O'Brien. 
Wilkinson 
Carey.     Crewe. 
Bere.     Jacob. 
Culme.    Sexton.  (W. 

and  T.  Brady  elected 

in  their  stead). 
Wirrall.     Grimesdich. 
Thornton.     Bloode. 
Sibthorpe.  Downton. 
Molyneux.     Ware. 
Crook.     Biers. 
SirR.  Morison.  Crowe. 
Harris.     Gosnold. 

Temple.  Sir  C.  Doyne. 

Parsons.     Rolles. 
Crofton.      White. 
Blundel.     Disney. 
Gore.     Cherry. 
SirR.  Wingfield.  West. 
Bassett.     Leighe. 
Sir  E.  Brabazon.  Dal' 


way. 
Trevor. 


Hamilton. 


Newton  in 
Ardes 


Le 


Enniskillen 

Tuam 

Tralee 

Gowran 

Carrickdrum 

rusk 
Castlebar 
Monaghan 
Ballinakill 


...    Sir     G.      Coningham, 

Cartcart. 
...  Atkinson.     Fernham. 
,..  SirT.  Rotheram.  Pecke. 
...  Blennerhasset. Dethicke. 
. . .  Staunton.     Swayne. 


,  Griffith.     Bellott. 

Sir  J.  Bingham.  Peyton. 

Reeves.     Cowley, 
SirR.  Ridgway.  Brereton. 
Roscommon...  Marwood.     Smith. 
Boyle  ...  Cusacke.     Meredith. 

Sligo...  ...  Andrews.     Southworth. 

Clogher  ...  Watkins.     Ferrar. 

Dungannan  ...  More.      Pollard. 
Strabane        ...  Molyneux.       Mont- 
gomery. 
Agher  ...  Birkinshaw.       Scorye. 

Tallaght        ...  Lowther.     Parsons. 
Lismore        ...  Boyle.     Annesley. 
Athlone         ...  S'  John.    Nugent. 
Kilbeggan     ...  Sir  R.  Newcomon. 

B.  Newcomon. 


Fethard 
ford) 
Enniscorthy 
Wicklow 


(Wex- 


Loftus. 
Fisher. 
Usher. 


Pemberton. 

Perkins. 

Esmonde. 


ADDENDA. 

Epitaphs  in  the  Franciscan  Church  of  Montorio,  Rome. 

The  Earl  of  Tyrone  died  in  Rome,  July  20,  1616,  in  the  seventy-sixth  year  of 
his  age  ;  and  was  buried  in  the  Franciscan  Church  of  Montorio  :  his  tomb  bears 
the  simple  epitaph — 

D.   O.  M. 

Hie.  Quiescunt. 

Ugonis.  Principis.  O'Neill. 

Ossa. 

2  v 


354  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO  I  598. 


Epitaph  of  his  son,  the  Baron  of  Dungannon. 

D.  O.   M. 

Hugoni  Baroni  de  Donganan  Hugonis  Magni  O'Neill  Principis  et  Comitis 
Tironiae  Primogenito,  Patrem  et  Rodericum  Comitem  Tkconalliae  Avunculum, 
pro  Fide  Catholica  quam  multos  annos  contra  haereticos  in  Hibernia  fortiter 
defenderant,  relictis  statibus  suis,  sponte  exulantes  ad  communem  Catholicorum 
asylum,  Uibem  Romam,  pro  sua  singulari  in  Deum  et  Parentes  pietate,  secuto, 
cujus  immatura  Mors  spem  de  eo  restaurandae  aliquando  in  illis  partibus 
Catholicae  Religionis,  ob  ejus  insignes  animi  et  corporis  dotes  ab  omnibus, 
conceptam  abstulit,  ac  dicto  Roderico  avunculo  fato  simili  absumpto  conjunx- 
it  Occidit  tarn  suis  quam  totae  curiae  flebilis  Nono  Kal.  Oct  mdcix 
Aetatis  suae  xxiv. 


Epitaph  of  the  O '  Donnells. 

D.   O.    M. 

Roderico  Principi  O'Donnellio,  Comiti  Tirconalliae  in  Hibernia,  qui  pro 
Religione  Catholica  Gravissimis  defunctus  periculis  in  sago  pariter  et  in  toga 
constantissimus  cultor  et  Defensor  Apostolicae  Romanae  Fidei,  pro  qua  tuenda 
et  conservanda  e  patria  profugus,  lustratis  in  Italia,  Gallia,  Belgio  praecipuis 
sanctorum  monumentis  ;  atque  ibidem  Principum  Christianorum  singulari  amore 
et  honore  Sanctiss.  etiam  P.  ac  D.  Pauli  PP.  V.  paterno  affectu  susceptus,  in 
maximis  Catholicorum  votis  de  felici  ejus  reditu,  summum  doloremsuis,  et 
moerorem  omnibus  in  hac  Urbe  ordinibus  immatura  morte  quam  obiit  III.  Kalen- 
das  Sextiles  anno  salutis  mdcviii.  aetatis  suae  xxxm.  Quern  mox  secutus 
eodem  tramite,  ut  eadem  cum  eo  beatitute  frueretur  Calfurnius,  Frater, 
periculorum  et  exilii  socius,  in  summa  spe  et  expectatione  bonorum  de  ejus 
nobilitate  animi  quam  virtus  et  optima  indoles  exornavit,  sui  reliquit  desiderium, 
et  moestitiam  coexulibus  xvni  Kal.  Oct.  proxime  sequentis  Anno  Aetatis  xxv. 
Utrumque  antecessit  aetate  et  fati  ordine  frater  primogenitus  Hugo  Princeps, 
quem  pie  et  Catholice  pro  Fide  et  Patria  cogitantem  Phillippus  III.  Hispa- 
niarum  Rex  et  vivum  benevole  amplexus,  et  in  viridi  aetate  mortuum  hono- 
rifice  funerandum  curavit  Vallisoleti  in  Hispania  nil  Idus  Septembris 
A.    S.    MDCII. 


APPENDIX.  355 

The  widow  of  this  Calfurnius  or  Caffar  O'Donnell  was  buried  in  the 
Franciscan  Convent  of  Louvain  with  this   epitaph — 

D.  O.  M. 

Excellentissima.  Domina.  Rosa.  O'Dogharty. 

Dynastarum.  Inisoniae.  Filia.  et.  Soror. 

Alti  Sanguinis.  Decus. 

Morura.  Temperantia.  et  Splendidis  Conjugiis.  Auxit. 

Primum.  nupta.  Inclyto.  Heroi. 

D.  Cafarro.  O'Donnello. 

Tirconnalliae.  Principis.  Germano. 

Dein.  Excellentissimo.  Domino.  Eugenio.  O'Neillo. 

Catholici.  In.  Ultonia.  Exercitus. 

Archistratego. 

Utramque  Fortunam.  Experta.  Et.  Miseriam.  Rata . 

Coelum  Studuit.  Benefactis.  Mereri. 

Septuaginta.  Major.  Denata. 

Bruxellis.  i.  Novembris.  Anno  mdclx. 

Suo.  Cum.  Primogenito.  Hugone.  O'Donnello. 

Praestolatur.  Hie.  Carnis.  Resurrectionem. 

In  St.  Marys  Church,  Clonmel. 
No.  i : — HicjacetTerrentius  O'Donel  qui  obiit  4  Martii  1 583  eteius uxor  Elena 
White  qua;  obiit  24  Aprili  1591  Eorum  filii  qui  hunc  tumulum  fieri  fecerunt  A  D 
1592  :  quibus  sit  propitius  Omnipotens.     Amen. 

No.  2: — Hie  jacet  Galfridus  Barron  qui  obiit  22  Martii  A.  Dni  1601,  et 
Belina  White  uxor  eius  quse  hunc  tumulum  fieri  fecerit  A.  Dni.  1605  et  obiit  A. 
Dni.  16 10  quorum  aiabus  propitietur  Deus. 

No.  3  / — Johannes  gelido  jacet  hoc  sub  marmore  Vitus  ; 

Charaque  Johanna;  conjugis  ossa  pias. 

Bis  Major,  Went  worth  primum  prorege,  secundum, 

Catholici  subiens  foedera  martis  obit. 

26  Augusti  1643. 

At  St.  Patrick's  Well,  Clonmel. 
No-  4  : — Hie  jacet  D.  Nicholaus  White  Armiger  virpietate  constantia  mansu- 
etudine  et  integritate  morum  conspicuus  et  amabilis,  obiit  30  die  Augusti  1622  , 
eius  corpus  ex  antecessorum  capella  quae  borealemsacelli  hujus  partem  respicit  in 

••  See  these  epitaphs  in  the  Rev.   C.   P.    Meehan's  Fate  and  Fortunes   of  Tyrone  and 
Tyrconnell,  pp.  446,  477,  476,  474. 


356  STATE  OF  IRELAND  ANNO   I  598. 

hoc  monumentum  22  die  Decembris  1623  translatum  est,  cuius  animas  pro 
pitietur  Deus.  Sacellum  hoc  S  Nui  Jesu  eius  que  genetrici  B  Maria?  Virgin' 
dicatum  construxerunt  in  perpetuam  dicti  Nicolai  memoriam  Barbara  White 
uxor  eius  vidua  et  Henricus  White  Alius  eius  et  haeres. 

No  5  • — A  small  tablet,  bearing  three  roses  (the  device  of  the  White  family,) 
underneath  which  is  this  inscription  ■ — 

Et  trias  est  Numero  et  Natura  est  una  colorem 
En  ubi  presidium  Vitus  et  arma  locat. 

At  the  R.  C.  Church,  Irishtown. 

No.  6  : — A  massive  tablet,  which,  perhaps,  was  set  in  some  conspicuous  part 
of  the  old  chapel  of  the  Whites.  It  bears  in  full  relief  the  arms  of  the  family, 
and  around  the  margin,  and  at  the  foot,  this  legend  : — 

"  Insignia  Joanis  White  armigeri  quondam  comit.  Palatini  Tipperarias 
Seneschal,  comitati  Wa'erfordiae  vice-comiti.  Clonmel  primi  majoris  sic  transit 
mundi  gloria  Benedictus  Vitus  hasres  dicti  Joani  et  Alsona  haec  fieri  fecerunt 
1615.'-* 

In  the  Franciscan  Church  is  a  chalice  with  the  inscription :  Orate  pro- 
animabus  Edmundi  Everard,  et  Joannae  Naish  uxoris  ejus  1645.  In  the  C. 
Church  of  Cappoquin  there  is  a  chalice  with  the  inscription  :  Ora  pro  animabus 
D.  Ricardi  Everard  et  Catharinae  Tobyn. 

See  120  epitaphs  wayside  crosses  or  other  souvenirs  of  the  families 
of  the  1 6th  century,  in  this  book,  pp.  24,  45,  60,  62,  63,  64,  68,  69,  70,  71,  72,  80, 

97.  98,  99.  I°°.  i°5.  II0>  "I,  133.  134,  139.  l6°>  l6l>  l6j.  l63>  164,  167,  170, 
171,  179,  180,  183,  184,  190,  192,  194,  197,  198,  201,  203,  204.  205,  209,  210, 
211,  212,  214,  225,  234,  236. 

Corrigenda. 

p.  211,  notes  '  and  *.  The  Rev.  J.  Everard,  C.C.,  Clonmel,  to  whom  I  owe 
the  two  last  inscriptions,  represents  the  Everards  of  Burntcourt.  There  are  still 
direct  male  descendants  of  the  Everards  of  Fethard — the  "  Little  Girl,"  who  is 
said,  at  p.  210,  to  be  the  sole  representative,  had  six  brothers  and  five  sisters 
older  than  herself,  and  her  father's  brother  had  a  large  family. 

Clonmel  Chronicle. 

p.  296— Camden's  description  of  Armagh  was  accidentally   omitted.     He 

•  Inscriptions  copied  and  published  by  Mr.  Kearney,  C.  E.,  of  Clonmel,  and  to  be  republished 
in  Mr.  Clark's  forthcoming  History  of  Clonmel. 


LIST    OF    THE    ROUND    TOWERS    OF    IRELAND  357 

say- — "Armagh  church  and  City  burnt  by  Shane  O'Neill  lost  its  ancient  splen- 
dour; at  present  it  consists  of  a  very  few  huts  covered  with  twigs,  and  the  ruined 
walls  of  the  monastery,  priory  and  Archbishop's  palace." 

Reference  letters  have  dropped  out  in  the  notes,  before  "  Angus,  p.  16  ;  '  In 
the  Fews,  p.  21  ;'  O'Donnell  dwelt,  p.  31  ;'  Quaere,  p.  32  ;b  Belonging  to,  p.  51; 
p  Lords  to  whom,  p.  87  ;  e  In  1601  Emann,  p.  119  ;  'In  1585  lived  Teig,  p.  154; 
James  Wyse,  p.  161  ;  z  Supple  of  Kilmocua,  p.  203  ;  '  Christopher,  9th  Baron, 
p.  227.  At  p.  64  line  6  supply  in  the  brackets,  [Cavanagh,  slain] ;  at  p.  266, 
for  '  Carvagh  '  read  Carnagh. 

Two  ancient  maps,  specially  lithographed  for  this  work,  were  lost  after  the 
death  of  Mr.  Kelly,  who  was  to  have  been  the  publisher  of  the  book. 


LIST  OF  THE  ROUND  TOWERS  OF  IRELAND. 

(Compiled  from  the  works  of  Ledwich,  Gough,  Wilkinson,  Petrie, 

Keane,  Stokes,  O'Neill,  and  others.) 

In  Co.  Dublin  .  .  .  8. — Clondalkin,  Lusk,  Swords,  Rathmichael ;    St.  Michael's' 

(Ship     Street),     Christ      Church/      Inismacnessan,' 

Finglas/ 
„    Meath 8. — Donaghmore,  Kells,     Ardbraccan/  Clonard/  Duleek,' 

Slane/  Trim/  Tullaghard.' 
„    Kildare 6. — Kildare,     Kilcullen,    Killossy,   Oughterard,   Teghadoe, 

Castledermot. 
„    Kilkenny  ....  6. — Aghaviller,    Fertagh,     Kilkenny,      Kilree,    Tullaherin, 

Tullamain. 
„    Kings  Co.   .   .  .  6. — Clonmacnoise,    (2)     Ferbane,    Ferbane,d    Seir-Kieran, 

Durrow.d 
,.     Queen's    Co.    .  .   5. — Dysert,  Killeskin,  Teampul  na  Cailleach-dubh,  Tima- 

hoe,  Rosenallis/ 
,,    Louth     4. — Dromiskin,  Monasterboice,  Drogheda/-  Louth/ 


Wicklow 
Carlow  . 
Wexford 
Longford 
Cork   .  . 


.  .  .  4. — Glendalough  (2)  Glendalough/  Aghowle,d 
.  .  .   3. — Kellystown,  Killeshin/  Lorum/ 
.  .  .   2. — Ferns,  Ferry  Carrig.d 
.  .  .   2. — Inchcloran/Granard/ 

.  .  .  9. — Cloyne,  Kinneagh,   Ballybeg,'   Nohoval  Daly/  Bally- 
vourney/  Ballywerk,  Brigoon/  Cork/  Rosscarbery.d 

N.B. — '■  means  foundations  ;   !'  stump  ;    d'  destroyed. 


35^  LIST    OF    THE   EOUND    TOWERS    OF    IRELAND. 

In  Co.  Clare  ....  9. — Iniscattery,    Inisceltra,    Drumcleeve,    Dysert   O'Dea, 

Kilnaboy,5    Rath,5  Killaloe,  Clare,  Tomgraney.d 
,,    Limerick  ....  6. — Dysert,  Carrigeen,  Kilmallock,  Ardpatrick,5  Limerick,' 

Dunaman/ 

„    Kerry 4. — Rattoo,  Aghadoe,s  Currane,5  Ardfert.' 

„     Tipperary    .  .  .  4.  — Cashel,  Roscrea,  Roscrea/ Emly.d 

,,     Watcrford  .   .   .   2. — Ardmore,  Dungarvan.d 

„    Down     7. — Drumbo,    Maghera,    Cloch-Teach,     Mahee     Island,* 

Dundrum,  Down-Patrick,'  Castlereagh. 

,,    Antrim 4 — Antrim,  Trummery,  Ram  Island,  Armoy. 

„    Derry 4 — Deny,'  Drumachose, '  Dungiven,d  Tamlacht. ' 

„    Armagh 3 — Armagh, d  Armagh, '  Killeevy. 

„    Donegal 3 — Tory  Island,  Braade,  Raphoe.d 

,,    Monaghan  ....  3 — Clones,  Clones, "  Iniskeen. 

,,     Cavan 1 — Drumlane. 

„    Fermanagh    .   .  .    1  —  Devenish, 

,,     Tyrone 1 — Erigel.d 

„    Galivay  ....    jo— Kilmacduagh,    Kilbannon,  Ruscam,   Ardrahen,'  Aran- 
more,s  Killcoona,"  Ballygaddy,  Annadown,'  Fertamore,4 

Meelick.*1 
„    Mayo 8— Killala,  Turlough,  Meelick,  Aghagower,  Ballagh,  Baal, 

Newcastle,  Moat. ' 

,,    Sligo 4 — Ballymote,  Drumcliff,  Sligo  (2.) 

„    Roscommon   .  .   .  4 — Boyle, '  Oran,  *  Assylin, '  Roscommon. 


FINIS. 


INDEX. 


359 


Abbey  Leix,  75,  78. 

Abbotstown,  271. 

Abelles,  352. 

Achar,  95. 

Achonry,  237. 

Acquaviva,  286. 

Adams,  ill,  171,  236. 

Adamstown,  57,  95 

Adare,  197,  283. 

Adrain,  99. 

Agarde,    35 1  • 

Aghadoe,  281. 

Agher,  95,  100. 

Aghery,  264. 

Aghviller,  235. 

Aha,  253. 

Aldworth,  281. 

Alene,  256. 

Alford,  102. 

Allardstown,  264. 

Allen,  5,  37,  44,  46,  48,  57,    95, 

235,  252,  351. 
Allen,  Bog  of,  75. 
Allenstown,  94,  95,  100. 
Amerson,  31. 
Amalies  (recte  O'Reillies),    1 1 7, 

Il8,  119,   120. 
Anaghes,  255. 
Andrews,   353. 
Annagh,  273. 
Annaghmore,  276 
Annesley,  282,  353. 
Annogh  Castle,  249. 
Antislon,  96. 
Antrim,  13,  31,  240,  260,   261, 

296. 
Antwerp,  162. 
Arbracan,  92,  93. 
Archbolds,  37,  38,  263,  350. 
Archdeacon,   66,  70,   167,    278, 

352- 
Archer,  66,    67,    70,    72,    210, 

291.  342.344.347,  35'- 
Archertone,  106. 
Arclo,  41,  52,  208,  239. 
Ardagh,  168,  234,  285. 
,,       Bishop  of,  234. 


Ardahill,  279. 
Ardchille,  49. 
Ardclony,  271. 
Ardcrony,  215,  348. 
Ardee,  3,  5. 
Ardenoch,  239. 
Ardes,  6,  10,  II,  232,  260. 
Ardfert,  189,  190. 

,,       Bishop   of,    191,     236, 

263.  282. 
Ardfry,  272. 
Ardglass,  12,238,  239. 
Ardloman,  95,  96. 
Ardmolchan,  93. 
Ardmollan,  92. 
Ardmore,  165. 
Ardmothe,  95,  96. 
Ardre,  252. 
Ardremakow,  239. 
Ardriston,  254. 
Ardroute,  239. 
Arland,  67. 
Armagh,  3,  5,   10,    19,   20,    23, 

24,  25,  95,  233,  235,  237,  247, 

250,  251,  260,  285,  296,  306, 

322. 
Armie,  English,   3. 
Armoy,  167. 
Armstrong,  83. 
Arnold,  71. 
Amy,  198. 
Arolstone,  95. 
Aronston,  97. 
Arran,  Isle  of,  138,  238. 
„      Earl  of,  238,  266. 
Arspoll,  254. 
Artlanan,  239. 
Arthur,  204,  210,  283,  351. 
Arward,  100. 
Ashbrook,  270. 

Ashe,  50,  91,  94,239,  265,352. 
Asheroe,  31. 
Ashpoole,  37. 

Askton,  or  Askeaton,  198,  233. 
Asoalye,  256. 
Asscy,  92. 
Assye,  96. 
Athboy,  91,  92,  96,  101,  102. 


Athcarne,  93,  98,  99,  260. 
Athcourie,  237. 
Athenrie,  131. 

,,         Baron  of,  226. 
Athleag,  151,  277. 
Athlone,    102,    104,     152,   224, 

264,  277. 
Atronan,  95. 
Athlumney,  92,  106. 
Athshe,  95. 
Athy,  44,  272. 
Atkinson,  102,  353. 
Audley,  9,  101. 
Aughrim,  274. 
Austria,  64. 
Ayle,  271. 
Aylemers,  37,    43,  46,   48,   93, 

94,  96,  99,  107,  260. 
Aylewards,  161,  163,  255,  350. 
Aylewardstown,  71,  255. 

B. 
Babbarne,  259. 
Babe,  4,  352. 
Baggad,  72. 
Bagnal,  2,  4,  6,   8,    12,  51,    52, 

53.  253.  349,  35°- 
Bagot,  281. 
Bagolstown,  281. 
Baigre,  256. 
Baker,  350. 
Balaghene,  8. 
Balala,  239. 
Balandsox,  253. 
Balankey,  99. 
Balduff,  253. 
Baldwinstown,  266. 
Ba'ebeg,  256. 
Baleclockan,  78. 
Balecowanne,  256. 
Baledungan,  92. 
Baleguffindowe,  258. 
Balehartin,  256. 
Balehorron,  256. 
Balemakeyan,  256, 
Balenfane,  256. 
Balenosky,  258. 
Balera,  258. 


360 


IXDEX. 


Balerotherie,  36,  37,  90. 
Baletrasnie,  258. 
Balevolo,  258. 
Balf,  91,  95,  96,  99,  352. 
Balgan,  257. 
Balgard,  37. 
Balgath,  94. 
Balglunin,  272. 
Balgriffin,  37,  38. 
Baliburtane,  151. 
Baliesko,  101. 
Balinesloe,  134,  151. 
Ball,  93,  351. 
Ballaghan,  31. 
Ballaghtobin,  71. 
Ballaigh,  259. 
Ballaighene,  257. 
Ballakit,  32. 
Ballashannon,  32. 
Ballawlie,  38. 
Ballebockrane,  259. 
Ballebragane,  5.  349. 
Ballebrennan,  256,  349. 
Balleconchin,  166. 
Balleconnor,  256. 
Ballegerce,  256. 
Ballegrand,  258. 
Ballegray,  96. 
Ballegresaigh,  238. 
Ballemony,  258. 
Ballenacaldde,  96. 
Ballencurre,  258. 
Ballendel,  95. 
Ballenemone.  103. 
Balleneskeagh,  96. 
Ballentrton,  107. 
Ballenrana,  258. 
Ballensar,  257. 
Balleouddane,  256. 
Balleoulouagh,  238. 
Bailer,  145. 
Balleragat,  66,  67. 
Balleteg,  256. 
Ballevalie,  258. 
Ballevodick,  258. 
Ballewallken,  258. 
Ballgath,  94. 
Ballibrayen,  5. 
Ballibnrlie,  82,  91. 
Ballibyan  Mountains,  144. 
B:\llicallie,  254. 
Ballicappock,  62. 
Balliconiel,  106. 
Balliconnicke,  61. 
Balliconnor,  61,  63. 
Ballicotlan,  48. 
Ballicranigambege,  254. 
Ballidufie,  254, 


Balliellen,  253,  263. 

Ballifenyne,  253. 

Ballihack,  57. 

Ballihemoge,  254. 

Balliloughreagh,   57. 
.  Ballilowe,  254. 
j  Ballimolchan,  93. 
;  Ballimore,  102,  106. 
I  Ballinabay,  315. 

Ballinagard,  283. 

Ballinagir,  256. 

Ballincapoch,  48. 

Ballincor,  40,  41. 

Ballinecorly,  no. 

Ballinedramey,  96,  101. 

Hallinekelly,  56. 

Ballinelock,  no,  258. 

Ballinerali,   56. 

Ballineskelligy,  239. 

Ballingarry,  200,  331. 

Ballingtoughe,  67. 

Ballinhawnemore,  58. 

Ballinlough,  105,  106,  270,  271. 

Ballinmore,  37. 

Ballinree,  266,  270. 

Ballintabler,  152,256. 

Ballinter,  269. 

Ballintlea,  264,  279. 

Ballintubber,  152,  256. 

Ballinvacky,  58. 

Ballinvilla,  2S4. 

Balliot,  96. 

Balliroe,  58. 

Ballithanon,  249. 

Ballitample,  254. 

Balliterney,  254.        , 

Ballivaghan,  126. 

B.illneagh,  106. 

Ballnekill,  95. 

Ballohell,  256. 

Ballough,  254. 

Ballown,  39. 

Ballrodan,  95. 

Ballstown,  95. 

Balltraseney,  96. 

Ballunalheu,  97. 

Ballvomen,  no. 

Ballyadams,  78. 

Ballyaghbregan,  255. 

Ballyancaislean,  336. 

Ballyandun,  348. 

Ballyasshin,  62. 

Ballybarna,  265. 

Ballybege,  254. 

Ballybirr,  255. 

Ballybollen,  275. 

Ballybort,  77,  8l. 

Ballyboy,  83. 


Ballybracke,  253. 
Ballybranagh,_  1 05. 
Ballybrennan,  58,  349. 
Ballybrett,   233. 
Ballybrit,  81,  77. 
Ballybrittan,  82. 
Ballybrittas,  79,  84. 
Ballybunnion,  283. 
Ballybur,  70. 
Ballyburlie,  82,  91. 
Ballyburtane,  82. 
Ballycallen,  50. 
Ballycashen,  166. 
Ballycavoge,  166. 
Ballyclough,  166. 
Ballyco^ly,  60. 
Ballycomask,  209. 
Ballyconin,  104. 
Ballyconnor,  63. 
Ballycoiky,  104. 
Ballycorry,   100. 
Ballycowan.  83,  85. 
Eallycre,  255. 
Ballycronigan,  253. 
Ballycallen,  283. 
Ballycurrin,  209. 
Ballydarmyne,  254. 
Ballydonelan,  274. 
Ballyeane,  39. 
Ballyen,  68. 
Ballyfarnage,   266. 
Ballyfarnocke,  58. 
Ballyfennon,  71. 
Ballyfoell,  255. 
Ballyforan,  266. 
Ballyfoyle,  68,  255. 
Ballygeary,  58,  61. 
Ballygrant   277. 
Ballyhaire,  277. 
Ballyhaly,  60,  265. 
Ballyharth,  62. 
Ballyheige,  282. 
Ballyheney,  166. 
Ballyhinch,  60. 
Ballyhire,  60,  266. 
Ballyhomyn,  255. 
Ballyhubbert,  281. 
Ballyhymickny,  209. 
Ballykeogh.  61. 
Ballykey,  38. 
Ballyknockan,  79. 
Ballyleagh,  53. 
Ballyleigh,  265. 
Ballyline,   271. 
Ballylorcan,  71. 
Ballylorka,  255. 
Ballymacarne,  61. 
Ballymack,  70. 


rxnF.x. 


#1 


Ballymackeogh,  284. 

Ballymager,  62,  265. 

Ballymaka,  72. 

Ballymartin,  68. 

Bally  McCloghny,  255. 

Bally  McCrony,  255. 

Ballymoe,  2S3. 

Ballymoge,  253. 

Ballymore,  58,  60,  8g,  10 3.  274. 

326. 
Ballymorough,  255. 
Ballymote,  145,  336,  247. 
Ballymount,  106. 
Ballymoyer,  266. 
Ballymurray,  277. 
Ballynacor,  270. 
Ballynafad,  273. 
Ballynalacken,  272. 
Ballynatine. 
Ballyneale,  72. 
Ballynebally. 
Ballynerowly,  255. 
Ballynitie,  199. 
Ballynonelie,  209. 
Ballyraddy,  255. 
Ballyrankin,  265. 
Ballyreddy,  72. 
Ballyrian,  253. 
Ballyroghy,  256. 
Ballysax,  252. 
Ballyshannon,  31,   32. 
Ballysonan,  48. 
Ballsop,  61. 
Ballystrew,  260. 
Bally teige,  62,  254. 
Ballytramon,  266. 
Ballyvannon,  284. 
Ballyvorish,  209. 
Ballywhyghan,  239. 
Bally  William  Roe,  254. 
Balmadon,  37. 
Balmadroght,  39. 
Balmagere,  59,  62. 
Balmakeyrie,  256. 
Balnegin,  95. 
Baloebrack,  107. 
Balrath,  95,  106,  269. 
Balreske,  95. 
Baltimore,  168,  239. 
Baltinglass,  45,  48,  49,  226,  23- 1, 

284,  349. 
Baltrasna,  271. 
Balsound,  101. 

Balyna,  80,  261,  267.  270,  27 ;. 
Banagh,  248. 
Banelagh,  36. 
Bangor,  259. 
Baniekard,  258. 


Bann,  15,  17,  20,  28,  234,  25S. 

Bannockburn,  16. 

Bannow,  64,  256. 

Bantrie,  62,  168,  256,  257. 

Barclay,  198,  206. 
I  Barge,  56. 
1  Bargie,  256. 
;  Bargy,  60. 

Barick,  291. 
1  Barker,  269. 
;  Barna,  273,  274. 

Barnet,  46. 

Barne  Veddon,  255. 

Bamwall,   4,    5,    38,  39,  96,  97, 
228,  269,   270,  290,  291,  292, 

349,351-352- 
Barret,  182,  350. 
Barrelstown,  284. 
Barriestown,  257. 
Barrington,  79,  352. 
Barringston,  48. 
Barron,  68,  253,  355. 
Barrowe    River,  50,   56,  64.  73, 

75.  73,  81. 
Barry,  54,  61, 167,  169,  171,   182, 

198,  224,   254,  257.  278,  351. 
Barrymore,  1 68,  278. 
Barry  Oge,  1 72. 
Barryscourt,  271,  278. 
Barton,  262. 
Basset,  353. 
Bathes,  5,  37,  38,  39,  93,  94,  98, 

99,252,269,  290,  291,  292.351. 
Bauk,  265. 
Bawnmore,  266,  273. 
Bealalahun,  275. 
Bealan,  253. 
Bealing,  35,  38,  4S. 
Bealingston,  38 . 
Bearchin,  168. 
Beare,  372. 
Bearra,  168. 
Beccanston,  39. 
Bective,  92. 
Beckell,  23. 
Bedge,  97. 
Bedlovv    (or   Bellew),  4.  3S,    39, 

45,94,  100. 
Bedlowston,  92. 
Beecher,  281. 
Beechwood,  277. 
Beerford,  100. 
Beg,  38,  92,  94,  96,  552. 
Belaclare,  239. 
Belalem,  239. 
Belanamore,  276. 
Belatha  Lagain,  5. 
Beleareele,  58. 


Beleeke,  31,  143,  297. 

Belfield,  78. 

Belgard,  37. 

Bellaborow,  256. 

Bellabow,  256. 

Bellame,  93. 

Bellander,  92. 

Belfast,  18. 

Belletston,  106. 

Bellot,  353. 

Belling,  38,  48,  252,  35 1. 

Belleushen,  256. 

Bellews  (see  Bedlow),  4,  38,  39, 

45,  94,  100,  260.  263,   351. 
Bellewstown  (see  Bedlowstown), 

92,  94,  100. 
Bellowe,  252. 
Belturbet,  247. 
Benburbe,  27. 
Benford,  46. 
Bengley,  5. 
Bennecerry,  254. 
Bennet,  35 1. 
Benson,  9. 
Bere,  353. 
Berkeley,  2J3,  350 
Berks,  280. 
Berlagh,  256. 
Berminghams,    45,    46,   48,    50, 

91,93,101,  105,235,272,349, 
Bernard,  281. 
Bertiers,  13. 
Beste,  92. 
Bethe,  351. 
Betagh,  95,  99. 
Bettifield,  277. 
Bewlie,  5. 
Bierweisour,  239. 
Billingesley,  206. 
Bingerstown,  94. 
Bingham,  33,  275,  276,  350,353 
Birford,  93. 
Birkenshaw,  353. 
Birne  (see  Byrne),  253,  254. 
Birr,  83. 
Birrell,  5. 
Birt,  32,  94. 
Birton,  253. 
Bishops,  233,  285. 
Bishopscourt,  72,  252. 
Bishopstown,  104,  1 10. 
Bisset,  5,  16. 
Black,  101. 
Blackcastle,  72,  94". 
Blackfort,  78. 

Blackhall,  98,  252,  253,  257. 
Blackhill,  46,  93. 
Blackine,  94,  263. 

2  Z 


362 


INDEX. 


Blacklowne,  82. 

Blackney,  38,  351,  352. 

Blackrath,  47. 

Blackwater,  20,  25,  46,  90,  304, 

306,  315. 
Blackwood,  252. 
Blake,  96,  133.272,273,351,352 
Blakeney,  274. 

Blanchfield,  71,  255,  284,  349. 
Blanchveldstoune,  255. 
Blaney,  12. 
Blarney,  279. 
Blatherwick,  272. 
Blayne,  97. 
Blayney,  233,  261. 
Bleachfield,  254. 
Blindwell,  274. 
Blood,  353. 
Bloomfeld,  67. 
Blount,  128,  233. 
Blundel,  353. 
Boanstown,  93. 
Bobsgrove,  271. 
Bodkin,  132,  133,  273,  352. 
Bodlen,  12. 
Bolan,  266. 
Boles,  94. 
Bolgan,  61. 
Bolger,  72. 
Bollintollin,  254. 
Bolton,  95,  351. 
Bonecarry,  61. 
Bonneltstown,  69,  70. 
Bonnoght,  7. 
Boreduffe,  253,  254. 
Boresheis,  255. 
Borranstown,  38,  39. 
Borris,  265. 
Bosher    (Busher    or   Bouchier), 

61,82,  86,87,205. 
Bostock,  167. 
Botford,  94. 
Bothnan,  5. 
Bouchier,  271,  350. 
Bourk,  163,  350. 
Bouth,  164. 
Bowdrave,  2S9. 
Bowen,  78,  79,  80. 
Boylan,  50. 
Boyle,  353. 
Boyne,  23,  35,  90. 
Boyle,  150,  277,  281. 
Boys,  95,  258. 
Boyton,  210. 
Boyton-Rath,  210,  289. 
Brabazon,  134,  154,  242,  246.  353 


Brack,  163. 

Bracklon,  106. 

Brackloonmore,  273. 

Brady,  271,  352,  353. 

Branan,  352. 

Brandon,  4,  5,  269. 

Branganston,  48. 

Brangastowne,  253. 

Brasell,  66,  258. 

Brasilagh,  12,  23,  30. 

Bray,  35,  37,  38,  282,  352. 

Breafy,  275. 

Brecaston,  48. 

Breeze,  274. 

Brefney,  90,  348. 

Brenan   50.  72. 

Brereton,  267,  353. 

Bresilagh,  25 1. 

Brett,  5. 

Breton,  48. 

Brewers,  164,  289. 

Breynd,  208,  350. 

Breyne,  2. 

Brianstown,  256. 

Bridges  99.  I0°.  '33- 

Bridgetown,  59. 

Brigbargye,  256. 

Brierton,  78. 

Briscoe,  26S. 

Briver,  164,  291. 

Bromestone,  57. 

Bromoyle,  32. 

Broncard,  242. 

Brooke,  42,  262. 

Brosenaghe,  104. 

Browalstown,  254. 

Brown,  3,  13,  16,  21,  33,  38,  47, 
59,61,91,  134,  163,  254,  256, 
257,   273,  275,  283,  289,  350, 

352- 
Brownesborne,  255. 
Bruwnsford,  6S,  72. 
Brownstown,  39,  47.  253. 
Broy,  258. 
Broymore,  38. 
Bruce,  16. 
Brune,  57. 
Brussel,  275. 

Bryan,  62,  214,  293,  331,  350. 
Brian    Carroghe's    County,    13. 

14- 
Bryanston,  62. 
Brvmingham  (see  Bearmingham) 

135.  252,  253. 
Budge,  97. 
Buckingham,  270. 


Buggon,  48. 
Bunburbe,  34. 
Buncrana  Castle,  32. 
Bundroose  Castle,  31. 
Bunes,  254. 
Bunnyconnelan,  275. 
Bunowen,  270. 
Bunratty,  126. 
Buolebrack,  2S4. 
Burdensgrange,  209. 
Burg,  35. 
Burgate,   167. 
Burgo.  73,  293. 

Burkes,  113,  139,  141,  199,  205, 
209,  220,  229,  255,   272,   273, 

277,  321.  327.  347.  348- 

Burleigh,  7,  59. 

Burnchurche,  58,  66,  68,  255, 
266. 

Burnell,  38.  96,  349,  351. 

Burrowes,  22,  31,  80,  265. 

Burris  Leigh,  209. 

Burske,  239. 

Burtall,  194. 

Burweisnowe,  239. 

Burwis  Oare,  239. 

Buss,  236. 

Butler,  5,  51,  52,  62,  65,  67,  6S, 
69,  70,  71,  76,  80,  163,  164, 
171,  209,  211,  212,  217,  226, 
228,  231,  271,  254,  255,  256, 
257,  265,  266,  271,  273,  284, 
289,  292,  305,  326,  331,    335, 

349.  35°- 
Butlerstown,  256. 
Butlerswood,  68. 
Buttevant,  174,  224,  278,  349. 
Buxton,  265. 
Byrne,  35,   39,  41.  54-  62,  253, 

264,  266,  290,  350. 
Bysse,  102. 
Bwy,  25S. 

C 
Cabboyhe,  135. 
Cabinteely,  264. 
Cabra,  263. 
Cabry,  270. 

Caddell,  38,  39.  93,  94.  97- 
Cahir,  284,  2S9,  335,  349- 
Cahirminane,  336. 
Cahir  Trant,  282. 
Caire,  30. 

Caire  MacEwlyn,  32. 
Caisleannua,  31. 
Calais,  83. 
Calavan,  289. 


rXDEX. 


Calboy,  30. 

Calcestown,  94. 

Calcutta,  274. 

Caldanglie,  32. 

Calebegge,  33,  23S,  239. 

Calf,  4S. 

Calfer,  57. 

Calmore,  30,  32. 

Callan.  66,  67,  70,  207. 

Callonok,  25S. 

Calry,  104. 

Camas,  283. 

Cambridge,  234. 

Campier,  350. 

Campion,  23. 

Cancrston,  1 10. 

Cantaule,  20. 

Canton,  58. 

Cantwell,  70,  88,  209,  212,  291. 

Cantwellstown,  70,  88. 

Cantyre,  15,  16. 

Cappagh,  266. 

Cappahun,    165. 

Cappanacus,  2S0. 

Car,  Lord,  5,  211,  288. 

Car,  215. 

Carberie.  45,  48,  167,   233,  253, 

279,  280,  284. 
Cardiff,  38,  101. 
Carduff,  38. 
Caregeschurche,  257. 
Carew,  51,  53,  286. 
Cargan,  31. 
Cargmannan,  257. 
Carhampton,  263. 
Carie,  15,  353. 
Carig,  266. 
Carlands,  270. 
Carlandstown,  265,  270. 
Carlingford,  3,   5,   12,    18,    238, 

244. 
Carlow,  18,  35,    36,  41,   44,  50, 

51,  56,  63,  64,  226,  233,   241, 

242,  253,  254,   265,  267,  271, 

2S3,  29S. 
Carne,  60,  106,  357. 
Carnegilla,  263. 
Carney,  226,  291. 
Carolan,   262. 
Carraduff,  272. 
Carraghmore,  1 65. 
Carraig  Locha  Ce,  276. 
Can  an,  211. 
Carrick,   34,  67,   94,    199,   211, 

215,  292. 
Carrick,  Earl  of,  284. 
Carrickbeg,  164. 
Carrick,  211. 


Carrickfergus,  18,  238. 
Carrickmayne,  38. 
Carrickstowne,  253. 
Carricknestayne,  254. 
Carrig-an-chobhlaigh,  336. 
Carrig  Teage,  34. 
Carrigbraghey,  32. 
Carrigfoyle,  189,  196,  282. 
Carrigogonnell,   198. 
Carrigmenan, 
Carrignavar,  279. 
Carrignegany,  255. 
Carrignory,  255. 
Carrigslany,  267. 
Carroll,  50. 
Carron,  254. 
Carrigonede,  28 1. 
Carroughmore,  160,   165,  231. 
Carrowkeel,  275. 
Carrymar,  108. 
Carton,  264,  349. 
Carty,  278. 
Cary,  353. 
Casie,  III,  352. 
Caslan-Stoke,  32. 
Cashell,  125,  209,211,233,235, 

236,  237,  286,  288. 
Cashell,  4,  5,  351. 
Cashiel,  94. 
Cassane,  239. 
Castles,  passim. 
Castle  Archdall,  262. 
Castlebar,  83,  263,  268,  275. 
Castle  Blakeney,  274. 
Castle  Carbery,  97,  265. 
Castle   Connell,    I99,   2S3,  229, 

349- 
C.  Cook,  281. 
C.  Cosby,  80. 
C.  Cuffe,  268. 
Castledermott,  44,  252. 
C.  Dirrhy,  78. 
C.  Dobbs,  261. 
C.  Donovan,  279. 
Castle  Durrow,  267. 
Castle  Fene,  31. 
C.  Ffrench,  273. 
C.  Fleming,  231. 
C.  Fogarty,  284. 
Castle  Gregory,  282. 
Castlehacket,  271,  273. 
C.  Hely,  70. 
Castlehaven,  168. 
Castlehaystown,  60. 
C.  Howel,  70. 
C.  Irvin,  269. 
C.  Ishin,  48,  283. 
C.  Island,  109. 


C.  Jordan,  82,  92. 
C.  Kelly,  274,  276. 
C.  Kevin,  43,  96. 
C.  Knock,  37,  38. 
C.  Lamerby,  92. 
C.  Lyf,  71. 
I  C.  MacAwliffe,  279. 
C.  Martin,  18,  45,  46,  60,  252. 
C.  Mayne,  244. 
C.  Minard,  282. 
C.  More,  275. 
C.  Morres,  284. 
C.  Pigot,  75. 
C.  Pollard,  270. 
C.  Quin,  280. 
C.  Richard,  96. 
C.  Reagh,  II,  12,  166. 
C.  Ring,  4. 
C.  Roe,  28. 
C.  Talbot,  266. 
Castleton  Kildrought,  98,  252. 
C.  Town,  48,  60,  92,  93.  94,  99, 

104,  108,  199,  231,  256. 
Castletown  Roche,  225,  278. 
Castletown  Lord,  79,  268,  280, 

284. 
C.  Troy,  283. 
Castle  Upton,  261. 
Castle  Warde,  260. 
Cathaoir  Mor,  81. 
Catherine  St.,  98. 
Caufelston,  97. 
Caufield,  12,261,  350. 
Cavan,  24,  89,  90,  102,  107,  1*7, 

121,  148,  241,  246,   247,  263, 

271,300. 
Cavanagh,  35,  40,  50,  51,  52,  53, 

54,  56,  57,  58,   59,  62,  63,  64, 

120,  226,  302,  328,  349. 
Cavin,  66. 
Celcarne,  92. 

Chamberlaine,  5,  39:  102. 
Chaple,  257. 
Chapman,  282. 
Charbs,  84. 
Charden,  235. 
Charlemont,  261. 
Charleville,  268. 
Chatterton,  19. 
Cheevers,  48,  60,  62,  93,  94,  99, 

256,  265,  269,  349. 
Chellyner,  352. 
Chester,  237. 
Cheshire,  282. 
Chichester,  15,  18,  25,  244,  246, 

248. 
Choiseul,  278. 
Churchtown,  94,  281. 


3^4 


1NDLX. 


Ciannacta,  28. 

Clagh,  71. 

Clancasters,   16. 

Clanalasters,  16. 

Clanant,  19. 

Clanbrasels,  2,  1 1. 

Clanbrassel,  19,  20,  261. 

Clancanane,  20. 

Clancan,  2,  20. 

Clancar,   167,  349. 

Clancark,   167. 

Clancarties,  168. 

Clancarvell,  24. 

Clancathal,  279. 

Clanchy,  350. 

Clanconcane,  21. 

Clancurry,  48. 

Clandeboye,   2,  6,  8,   11,  13.  14, 

17,  34,  260,  261. 
Clandonnels,  14,  16,  26. 
Clane,  47,  252. 
Clankonkeyne,  28. 
Clanlochlain,  280. 
Clanmore,  267. 
Clanmorris,  275,  276. 
Clanrickard,  134,  135,  139.  220, 

244,  272,  347. 
Claragh,  255. 
Claranclaris,  257. 
Clare  123,    124,    126,   240,  261, 

264,  271,   272,  274,  283,  284. 

348 
Clare,  291. 
Clashmore,  277. 
Clastnoe,  255. 
Clavagh,  71. 
Clayland,  58. 
Cleere,  238.  254. 
Cleggan,  261 . 
Cleggs,  99. 
Clelande,  56. 
Clement,  the  8th,  349. 
ClenghUh,  2S3. 
Clergy,  233,  285 
Clery,  66. 

Clifford,  33,  S5.  303. 
Clinch,  100. 
Clinshe,  39. 
Clinton,  4,  5. 
Cloane,  257,  25S. 
Cloesse,  256. 
Cloghatrabally,  280. 
Cloghcully,  350. 
Clogher,  234,  235,  250,  278,  2S5, 

287. 
Cloghla,  254. 
Cloghlack,  166. 
Clohn,  25. 


Cloine  McKnosha,  104. 

Clomeen,  168. 

Clomen,  256. 

Clomesse,  100. 

Clomochain,  97. 

Clomore,  254. 

Clonard,  96,  97. 

Clonardran,  93. 

Clonbela,  83,  268. 

Clonbrassel,  20,  69. 

Clonbreve,  96. 

Clonbrock,  273. 

Cloncare,  169,  222. 

Cloncoscoran,  277. 

Cloncurry,  252,  264. 

Clondae,  257. 

Clondalkin,  37. 

Clondaly,  96. 

Clondonnells,  250,  251. 

Clone,  68,  180. 

Clone      Bishoprick,     170.     172, 

263. 
Clonebrassel  McBooleclian,   9. 
Clonecollain,  107. 
Clonegawny,  84. 
Clonekevan,  96. 
Clonelly,  262. 
Clonemcknois,  234. 
Clones,  24. 

Clonfert,  131,  134.  237,  286. 
Clongell,  94,  97. 
Clongoweswood,   47,    245.   274, 

284. 
Clonin,  103. 
Clonkeraigh,  257. 
Clonkyraghe,  62. 
Clonlisk,  87. 
Clonlonnon,  104. 
Clonlost,  105,  270. 
Clonmacnoise,  83. 
Clonmaghan,  96. 
Clonmeen,  279,  2S0. 
Clonmel,     159,    210,    213,    229, 
_  283,  288,  289,  355. 
Clonmeny,  31. 
Clonmillier,  81,  84. 
Clonmoney,  265. 
Clonmore,  349. 
Clonmoynagh,  271. 
Clonmore,  4,  5,  52,  92,  280. 
Clon  na  Ross,  236. 
Clonnor,  5. 
Clonolyn,  53,  54. 
Clonranye,  258. 
Clonresse,  93. 
Clontarf,  38. 
Clonyardom,  259. 
Clonygagh,  253. 


Clonyn,  270. 

Clough,  254. 

Clougharde,  34. 

Cloughchricke,  253. 

Cloughgrenan,  51,  52,  264,  265. 

Cloughouter,  247. 

Clovey,  165. 

Clowater,  253. 

Clownebolche,  S3. 

Clowrann,  25S. 

Cloyduff,  83. 

Cloyne,  286,  288. 

Cluain  (see  Clone;,  330. 

Cnock-fionn,  34S. 

Cnoc-lacha,  348. 

Coaleshill,  258. 

Cockburn,  266. 

Code,  57. 

Codd,  60,  256,  349. 

Coe  Lough,  22. 

Coffee,  50. 

Cogan,  167,  350. 

Coghlan,  83. 

Cohery,  289. 

Coill-ui-Fiachrach,  347. 

Colambre,  105. 

Cole,  256. 

Cole,  96. 

Cole  Brook,  262. 

Colclough,  233,  253. 

Coleraine,   2,   25,   28,   249,  26.1. 

262,  297. 
Coleman,  170. 
Collan,  9,  20,  64. 
Collanhroe,  1 10. 
Collanstowne.  48. 
Collaton,  254. 
Collbaneghar,  78. 
Collbinstown,  253. 
Collen,3Sl. 
Colleges,  295. 
Colley,  48,  S2,  97,   233. 
Colleybeg,  168. 
Collymore,  2S0. 
Collmanstown,  39. 
Collmoolestone,  96,  99. 
Collmollen,  95. 
Collum,  236. 
Coltsman,  278. 
Comerford,  67,  70,  72,  166,  21 1, 

255,  289,  291,  292,  352. 
Compostella,   286. 
Comsey,  71. 
Comshen,  351. 
Comyn,  271, 
Conagh,  271. 
Condon,  163,  178,  179,  1S2  22$, 

335-  33°- 


INDEX. 


30; 


Coniy,  39,  47. 
Conmee,  270. 
Connaghe,  201. 
Connagher,  227. 
Connaght,  35. 
Connally  Barony,  253. 
Connaught,   I,  2,   35,    C4,    112, 
122,  237,  239,  273,  241,  287, 

303,  304,  336. 
Connor,  2,  83,  235,  271,  285. 
Conogarhen,  32. 
Conran,  37,  38. 
Conry,  286. 
Conshelaghe,  208. 
Contaule,  20. 

Conway,  72,101, 193,291.351,610. 
Coodurragha,  279. 
Cooke,  5,  245,  254,  281. 
Cookstown,  4,  93,  95,  101. 
Coolambre,   106,  270. 
Coolavin,  275,  276. 
Cooledovne,  5S. 
Cooley,  85. 
Cooleybeg,   168. 
Cooleymore,  168. 
Coolgreany,  266. 
Coolie,  45. 
Coolmoyne,  263. 
Coolnamuck,  164. 
Cooloo,  273. 
Cooly,  87. 
Coomlegane,  279. 
Coote,  268. 

Coppinger,  170, 171,271,278,351 
Coran,  37,  38. 
Corballies,  37,  93,  94,98. 
Corbally,  101,255.  265. 
Corbetstown,  83,  106. 
Corcabhascin,  271. 
Cordangan,  281. 
Cork,  County,  156,  158,  167,  1 70. 

188,   196,  216,   279,  2S0,  281, 

282. 
Cork,   Bishop  of,   172,  236,  286, 

288. 
Cork,  City,  167,  239,   240,  241, 

271,  278,  283,  284. 
Corkbeg,  278. 
Corlod,  255. 
Cormicke,  72. 

Corolanstown,  103,  105,  106. 
Coronary,  271. 
Corr,  273. 

Corraghmore,  231,  232: 
Corran,  18,  347. 
Corranvreddy,  25S. 
Corratobbann,  258. 
Correndestown,  39. 


Correndoo,  266. 

Correstone,  5. 

Corrikeris,  48. 

Coruagh,  266. 

Cosby,  78,  79,  80,  267,  352. 

Cosfeale,  282. 

Cosheshany.  208. 

Coskayll,  257. 

Cosse,   256. 

Costelloe,  275,  276. 

Costilaghe, 

Cotos  Lough,  22. 

Cotter,  279. 

Coubrey,  168. 

Council,  The,  244. 

Courcy,  Lord,  9,  171,  229,   27S, 

349- 
Courte,  The,  257. 
Courtney,  205. 
Courtown,  46,  264. 
Courtstown,   70. 
Coutin,  290. 
Cowbrodd,  258. 
Cowik,  67. 
Cowland,  126. 
Cowledoynge,  257. 
Cowle  Ishell,  255. 
Cowlneallven,  94. 
Cowley,  18,  82,  252,  265,  352. 
Cowlniagh,  79. 
Cox,  281. 

Coyne  Lough,  10,  12. 
Crackanston,  97. 
Cradockstown,  47,  349. 
Craghes,  163. 

Craigfergus,  13,  14,  18,  33. 
Creaf,  48. 
Creagh,  205,  278,  283,  288,  289, 

290. 
Creagh  Ballraen,  258. 
Crean,  Lynch,  275. 
Crebilly,  261. 
Creegh,  258. 
Creen,  30. 
Creey-Toune,  67. 
Cremorne,  261. 

Cregg,  267,  273,  274,  280,  281. 
Crew,  353. 
Crickstown,  91,  93,  96,  105,  269, 

270. 
Crint,  256. 
Crinton,  92. 
Croagh,  280, 
Croambeg,  255. 
Crobey,  96. 
Crolt,  73,281. 
Crofton,  277.  350. 
Crofty,  106. 


Croghan,  82,  85,  233,  239,   26S 

Croaghe  Patrick,  I, 

Croghfenaly. 

Croke,  67. 

Crome,  198. 

Cromelin,  39. 

Cromok,  259. 

Ciommer,  255. 

Cromp,  101,  269. 

Cromwell,  9,  45,  70,  89,  266. 

Crooke.  71,  353. 

Crook  Haven,  239. 

Crookestown,  253. 

Crosbie,  236,  282. 

Cross,  272. 

Crosses,  Wayside,  68,  69,  70,  -2, 

97.  98,  231,239. 
Crosshaven,  167. 
Crowe,  353. 
Cruachan,  81. 
Cruise,  38. 
Crumpe,  95,  269. 
Cuba,  271. 
Cuff,  185,  272. 
Culkieragh,  262. 
Cullen,  61,  64,  166. 
Cullendragh,  95. 
Cullenston,  61. 
Cullentraigh,  258. 
Culliebege,  254. 
Cul  Mac  Tryne,  31. 
Culme,  353. 
Culmore,  30,  249. 
Cummer,  272. 
Cumshaiagh,  225. 
Curliews,   144,  303. 
Curluddy,  72. 
Curmollen,  95. 
Curraboy,  273. 
Curragh,  37,38. 
Curraghleagh,  275. 
Curraghmore    (see  Corraghniore 

and  Carraghmore),  280,   347. 
Curran,  34,  284. 
Curry  glas,  281. 
Cusacke,    5,  27,  91,  93,  94,  95, 

96,   97,    105,    129,    269,  296, 

336.  353- 
Cushingstone,  94,  97. 
Cuskenny,  279. 
Cussyn,  352. 
Cutmollen,  92. 

D 

Daideston,  99. 
Daingean  ni-Hushy,  282. 
Dale,  256. 
Dalgan,  272. 


366 


INDEX. 


Dalgin,  274. 

Daljoy,  239. 

Dalkey,  36,  238,  239. 

Dallway,  252,  261,  353. 

Dalton,  71,  103,  no,  163. 

Dalystown,  271. 

Danesfort,  273. 

Daneston,  93,  99. 

Dangan,  70,  85,  125,  265,  283. 

Dangan,  I.  Beirn,  276. 

Danganmore,  70,  72. 

Danganstown,   71. 

Danyell,  252. 

Darcy,  64,   92,  93,   94,  96,    100. 

103,  106,  107,  133,  273. 
Dardesse,  96,  106. 
Dardestowne,  93,  94.  103. 
Darinlar,  165. 
Darlington,  264. 
Darrynane,  282. 
Dartry,  23,  24,  264. 
Daton,  67,  266,  255,  292. 
Darent,  281. 
Davanargh,  257. 
Davels,  72,  79,  253. 
Davers,  43. 
Davidstown,  57,  263. 
Daviestown,  257. 
Dawmans,  13. 
Dawson,  261. 
Daxe,  91,  352. 
Dayrane,  257. 
Dealbhna  Eathra,  83. 
Deanes,  68,  70,  254. 
Dease,  269,  270,  279. 
De  Bathe,  269. 
De  Beauvoir,  275. 
De  Burgo,  283,  287. 
Decies,  158,  160,  161,  165,  225, 

226,  277. 

De  Freyne,  276. 

Degert,  216. 

Delahoyde,  39,  49,   92,   93,  95, 

96,  99,  267. 
Delamaire,  10,  no. 
Delvin,    Lord,    103,    105,     ic6, 

227,  228,  270,  349. 
Dempsy,  84. 

Den.  39.  68,  232,   254. 
Dengan,  95,  96,  98. 
Denny,  190,  283. 

„     Barony  of,  255. 
De  Oviedo,  285. 
Derite,  50. 
Dermebeer,  165. 
De  Robeck,  267. 
De  Ros,  97,  264. 
Derpatrick,  95,  96,  loo. 


Derran,  85,  100. 

Deny,    28,    31,   80,    234,    239, 

249,  262,  285,  2S7,  297. 
Derrymollin,  83. 
Derrymore,  336. 
Derver,  4. 
Desart,  268. 
De  Rythre,  264. 
Deseret,  232. 
Desert,  267. 
Desmond,   45,  52,  67,    76,  156, 

166,  168,  170,  1S1,   195,   199, 

206,  219,  231,   278,  286,  331, 

333-  338,  349- 
Devereux,  57,  59,  62,  164.  256, 

257,  265,  266. 
Devonshire,  9,  235. 
De  Vesci,  261. 
Dexter,  92,  97. 
Digby,  252,  352. 
Dillon,  38,   39,   86,   93,  94,  95, 

96,  98,  99,  103,  104,  107,  no, 

»3.    137,    154.     269,     273, 

276,  350. 
Dingan,  82. 

Dingle,  157,  189,  239,   282. 
Dipper,  256. 
Dirr,  257. 
Disert,  78,  349. 
Disert  Cealaigh,  338. 
Dobbin,  67,  71,  163. 
Dobbs,  261. 
Docwra,  102,  261. 
Documents,  Original,  124,   290, 

339.  348. 
Dod,  252,  256. 
Dodwell,  276. 
Doe,  248,  249. 
Doinfert,  45,  48,  50. 
Doire-Mac-Lachtna,  338. 
Doire-ni-Donnell,  34S. 
Doherty,  262. 
Dollardstown,  93. 
Dolphin,  136,  273. 
Domano,  165. 
Domaston,  38. 
Domville,  234. 
Don,  276. 

Donadea,  46,  48,  107,  264. 
Donfort,  253. 
Dongan,  48,  98. 
Donagh,  36. 
Donakernie,  93. 
Donamore,  37. 
Doncannon,  57. 
Dondonnell,  103. 
Dondrome,  244,  257. 
Doneames,  106. 


Donegal,   2,   29,   31,    248,    260, 

262. 
Donell,  300. 
Donelan,  139,  234. 
Donemore,  100. 
Doneraile,  282. 
Donewer,  104,  105. 
Dongalpe,  257. 
Dongarvan,  164. 
Donibroke  Castle,  37. 
Don  Owen,  32. 
Donmoghan,  4. 
Donmore,  94. 
Donnelaghs,  33. 
Donnell,  79. 
Donnhiel,  262. 
Donnybrook,  38,  236. 
Donore,  103,  104,  105,  270,  283. 
Donoughmore,  284. 
Donovan  (see  O'Donovan), 
Doramestown,  95. 
Dormers,  70,  351. 
Dormondus,  66. 
Dorrown,  82. 
Douay,  285. 
Dougan,  253. 
Doughcloyne,  281. 
Dour,  46. 
Dovea,  282. 
Dowalla,  225. 
Dowdall,    5,   96,    98,    99,    231, 

232,  252,  349.  352. 
Dowdingleston,  48. 
Dowdontonne,  5. 
Dowell,  53. 
Dowleck,  91. 
Dowley,  72. 
Dowlin,  252. 
Down,   2,  6,   12,  235,  240,  245, 

260,  265,  266,  271,  285,  296. 
Downelong,  239. 
Downemore,   239. 
Downeshead,  239. 
Downings,  The,  50,  252. 
Downshire,  260. 
Downton,  252,  353. 
Dow  O'Loyaghe,  88. 
Dowrig,  239. 
Dowstown,  93,  97. 
Dowth,  91,  94,  98,  269. 
Doyle,  265. 

Doyne,  50,  252,  267,  353. 
Dracot,  93,  102,  106,  352. 
Drake.  5,  95,  98,  269. 
Drakerath,  95,  98,  269. 
Drakestown,  5,  94. 
Draper,  91,  234. 
Drew,  278. 


INDEX. 


367 


Drewscout,  278. 
Drinagh,  62. 
Drishane,  279,  281. 
Drogheda,  3.  46,  90,  239,  240, 243 
Dromahare,  276,  300. 
Dromaleague,  2S0. 
Dromane,  126,  160,  226. 
Drombar,  96. 
Dromconragh,  99. 
Di'omconran,  37. 
Dromehaire,  276. 
Dromes,  The,  36. 
Dromgold,  5. 
Dromgoldstoune,  5. 
Dromkeen,  2S3. 
Dromnagle,  37. 
Dromoland,  272. 
Dromore,  235. 
Dromore,  Bishop  of,  285. 
Dromore  Castle,  2S0. 
Dromsaurie,  96. 
Drought,  265. 
Drum-tidhneach,  330. 
Drumcar,  263. 
Drumcashell,  4. 
Drumneen,  168. 
Drumsallagh,  283. 
Drumfinnin,  286. 
Drylin,  71,  255. 
Dryneham,  38. 
Duagh  nafealla,  282. 
Duagh,  272. 

Dublin,  26,  48,  36,  59,  98,  112, 
232,  262,  263,  264,  2S7,  298, 

344.  345- 
Dublin,  County,  35.  36,   39,  40, 

42,  44,  64,  89,   9c,    113,  269, 

280,  298,  299. 
Dublin,  Archbishop,  37, 103,  285. 
Dudley,  264. 

Duff,  63,  198.  227,  256,  25S,  351 
Duffree,  56,  61. 
Duffrin,  6,  9,  II,  36. 
Duggan,  279. 
Dugin,  291. 

Duhallow,  278,  335,  336. 
Duharra,  331. 
Duiske,  69,  266. 
Duleek,  93,  94,  98,  100. 
Dullagan,  6. 
Dullardstown,  269. 
Duna,  279. 

Dunamore,   24,  93,  99. 
Dunamase,  75. 
Dunamond,  273. 
Dunan-Oir,  16S. 
Dunas,  78. 
Dunavall.  34. 


Dunbeg.  336. 

Dun  boy,  31,  83. 

Dunboyne,  31,  36,   92,  93,  211 

231,  269,  284,  349. 
Dunbroc,  38. 
Dunbrodie,  57. 
Dunburie,  239. 
Duncanon,  244. 
Duncomiack,  61. 
Duncowig,  167. 
Dundalke,  Town,  6,  236,  269. 
Dundanell,  no. 
Dundannion,  279. 
Dundeedy,  167. 
Dundermott,  276. 
Dunderrane,  261. 
Dundrum,  12. 
Duneen.   167. 
Dunnrth,'45,  48.  5°- 
Dungan,  III. 
Dunganmore,  70,  72. 
Dungannon,  27,  223,  224,  250, 

260,  297,  349. 
Dungarberry,  300. 
Dungarestown,  257. 
Dungarvan,  159,   164,  239,  244. 
Dungiven,  249,  262. 
Dungorly,  167. 
Dun-Guaire,  337. 
Dunkellyn,  23,  220. 
Dnnkerron,  168. 
Dunkit,  91. 
Dunlaghlen,  134. 
Dunlockney,  254. 
Dunloe,  280,  350. 
Dunluce,  17. 
Dunmanway,  279,  281. 
Dunmore,  69,  92,  96,  267. 
Dunmow,  100,  106,   107,  269. 
Dunmoylan,  236,  284. 
Dunnangall,   16S. 
Dunnas,  126. 
Dunne,  79,  80,  263,  267. 
Dunnocks,  48. 
Dunore,    (See    Donore   and 

Donewer)  47,  167. 
Dunowen,  167. 
Dunraven,  283. 
Dunsandle,  274. 
Dunsany,  92,  93,  101,  231,  269, 

349- 
Dunscombe,  281. 
Dunshaghlin,  37,  93. 
Dunsinane,  2S1. 
Dunsink,  38. 

Dunsoghly,  38,  90,  99,  263. 
Dunworley,  167. 
Duriforth.  4S. 


Durhamstown,  234. 

Durrough,  84. 

Durnam,  13. 

Dyngell,  239. 

Dysart,  79,  85,  105.  267,  270. 

Dyrr,  252. 


Eaghe   Lough,    11,    12,    13.  18, 

25- 
Earlstown,  255. 
Earne,  29,  122,  144,  148. 
Eastmeath,  120. 
Edenderrie,  82,  233. 
Edenduchar,  18. 
Edenduffcarrick,    18,  82,  260. 
Edgeworth,  271. 
Edgeworthstown,  271. 
Egerton,  5. 
Eichter,  232. 
Elfin,  150,  257. 
Elie,  87,  89,  264. 
Eliot,  61,  95,  101,  256. 
Ellis- Flynn,  34. 
Elloghe,  32. 
Emly,  207,  211,  236. 
Enagh,  271. 
Ench,  32. 
Eneas,   50,  289. 
Enfield,  45. 
Englysh,  213. 
Ennis,  210. 
Enos,  50,  289. 
Eniscorthy,  57,  63,  64. 
Ennistymon,  272. 
Erne,  24,  292. 
Erwarde,  95. 
Esherowean,  95. 
Eske,  31. 
Esker,  256. 
Echingham,  62. 
Esmond,  50,  61,  265,  353. 
Essex,  11,  14,  22,  23,  24  25.  59. 

63.     77.    85,    86,    262,   271, 

97- 
Etherunton,  253. 
Eustace,   39,  45,  46,  47,  48,  49. 

50,  61,  63,  94,  95,  100,  252, 

253.  265,  349. 
Evaghe,  (Neagh)  6,  7,  12. 
Evallo,  257. 
Evans,  284. 
Everard,  66,  95,  163,  210,  269, 

290.  349.  352.  356. 
Evers,  43,  93,  94,  97. 
Everson,  254. 
Evrell.  108. 


368 


INDEX. 


Fagan,  38,  254,  263,  348. 

Fahalea,  281. 

Failghe,  81. 

Fainge,  255. 

Fair,  255. 

Faly  O'Connors,  85. 

Fanagh,  248. 

Fanne  Castle,  30,  31. 

Fanning,  67,  255,  351. 

Farinhamon,  56. 

Farmar,  281. 

Farrell,  231. 

Fasagh,  255. 

Fask,  37. 

Fathrath,  96. 

Fatlock,   161,  350. 

Fawlestoune,  257. 

Fattra  Kattra,  239. 

Feara  Ceall,  83. 

Feddens,  166. 

Feiva,  261. 

Felten,  96. 

Feltrim,  38,  39. 

Fenes,  54. 

Fenton,  92,  245,   349. 

Fercal,   81,  83,  84,  85,  89,  241, 

268. 
Fercuolen,  43. 
Ferderrogh,  36. 
Fermanagh,    2,     24.    210,    220, 

233,  247,  261,  262,  297. 
Fermoy,  169,  171,  225,335.  349 
Fermor,  2S1. 
Femes,  35,   56,  57,  59,   61,   63, 

235.  236,  244,  253,  256,  266. 

300. 
Ferney,  14,  23,  24,  302. 
Fen  ell,  91. 
Ferriter,  192. 
Ferto,  11. 
Fertullaghe,  107. 
Fethard,  99,  210,  235,  256,  2S8. 
Fewes,  3,  19,  21,  23,  36. 
Feydorffe,  93. 
Ffrench,  273. 
Field,  38,  99,  292,  293. 
Fieldstowne,  37. 
Fingall,  46,  26S. 
Finglass,  37,  38,  39,  349. 
Finne,  258. 
Finvara,  274. 
Fishmoyne,  284. 
Fitton,  199,  205. 
Fitz  Archer,  70. 
Fitz  Brian,  253. 
Fitz  Bryan,  252. 


Fitz  Edmond,  179,  180,  181, 
191,  217,  253. 

Fitz  Edward,  70. 

Fitz  Garret,  38,  94,  163. 

Fitz  Gerald,  40,  45,  46,  47,  48, 
50,  68,  83,  87,  96,  101,  104, 
108,  202,  220,  226,  230,  232, 
252,  253.  254,  255,  266,  270, 
271,  277.  278,  281,  282,  283, 

335-  338,  35°.  352- 
Fitz  Gibbon,  197,  335,  336. 
Fitz  Harvie,  256. 
Fitz  Henrie,  58,59,  349-351.352 
Fitz  James,  46,  50,  257. 
Fitz  John,  62,  67,  94. 
Fitz  Laurence,  70. 
Fitz  Maurice,     103,     191,    225, 

282,  349. 
Fitz  Neal,  62. 
Fitz  Nicholl,  62,  256. 
Fitz  Nicholas,  289. 
Fitz  Patrick,  67,  79.  80,  267.  349 
Fitzphillips,  49. 
Fitzpiers,  78. 
Fitz  Piers,  49,  74. 
Fitz  Redmond,  50. 
Fitzsimon,  9,  38,  39,  106,  291, 

293,  302,  342,  348.  352. 
Fitz  Theobald,  163. 
Fitz  Thomas,  272. 
Fitz  Urse,  23. 
Fitz  Williams,  39,  93,  349. 
Flain,  II. 

Flattesburie,  46,  50,  349. 
Fleming,  4,   5,   48,   94,  95,  96, 

100,   167,   182,   227,  260,  314. 
Flemingston,  94.97,  101. 
Fleshillstone,  94. 
Flood,  50. 
Foaty,  278. 
Follyot,  73,  74,  351. 
Flower,  267. 
Fount,  39,  47,  273. 
Founteston,  47,  48. 
Fonn  Iartarach,  2S0. 
Foord,  101. 
Koordston,  IOI. 
Forde,  95. 
Fordston,  95. 
Fore,  90,  102,  103.  111. 
Forstall,  67,  69,  71,  255. 
Forstallstown,  255. 
Forster,  69. 
Fortanolan,  51,  52. 
Forth,  55,  56,  60.  253.  256. 
Foster,  38,  101. 
Fotherde,  256. 
Fnulkes,  43. 


Foulksrath,  68,  255. 

Fowleing,  93. 

Fox,  45,  81,  84,   in,  205,   268 

270. 
Foxville,  84. 
Frame,  96. 
France,  105. 
Frankfort,  284. 
Franstone,  95,  100. 
Frayne,  72,  100,  267. 
Freckleton,  12. 
Freerstown,  254. 
Frefans,  96. 
Freghanes,  209. 
French,  61,  133,  272,   273,  276, 

279. 
Frencheston,  97. 
Freyne,  72,  352. 
Freny,  255. 
Frinss,  256. 
Fues,  21,  302. 
Fullerton,  245. 
Furlong,  256,  257,  349,351. 
Furnaghts,  252. 
Fursetime,  256. 
Fyan,  252. 

Fynn,  25,  29,  30,  ^.  254. 
Fynne,  29,  30,  33. 


Gafney,  285. 

Gaille,  276. 

Gainstown,  94. 

Gall,  72,  255,  349. 

Galleystone,  257. 

Gallagh,  274,  277. 

Gall  von  Bourckh,  73. 

Gallgath,  95. 

Gallin,  36. 

Gallocar,  32. 

Galloways,  183. 

Gallstown,  72,  255. 

Galmoweston,  96. 

Galmoy,  69,  255,  266. 

Galtrim,  91,  92,95,  96,  232,  349. 

Galtrom,  291. 

Galway,  County,  69,  123,  125, 
130,  141,  150,  183,  226,  238, 
240,  241,  267,  270,  272,  273, 
274,  300. 

Galway  Town,   125,    131,    138, 

"39.  279- 
Galwey,  290,  351. 
Gardenmorris,  69,  267. 
Gareston,  39. 
Garesinotte,  259. 
Garisker,  252,  253. 
Garland,   4,  5,  95. 


INDEX. 


369 


Garlondstonne,  5. 

Garnegall,  32. 

Garrard,  66. 

Garreden,  257. 

Garrendenny,  266. 

Garrenusky,  258. 

Garretstown,  283. 

Garrevadden,  257. 

Garrycastle,  81,  83. 

Garryhill,  51,  53,  54. 

Garryhundon,  265. 

Garrymusky,  58. 

Garve,  31. 

Garvey,  95,  167. 

Gavin,  206. 

Gavel  Rannal,  302. 

Geashill,  75. 

Geere,  254,  258. 

Gellouse,  93. 

Gelloustone,  93. 

Gelston,   274. 

Gentestowne,  257. 

Geoghegan,  261. 

Geradstown,  93. 

Geraldines,  45,  49,  71,  101,  104 
160,  162,  171,  197,  205,   291 

Gerardstown,  269. 

Gerlone,  5,  349. 

Gerlonstown,  97. 
Gernon,  4,  98,  260,349. 
Gernonstown,  4,  94,  260. 
Gerrot,  9,  166,  290. 
Geer,  258. 
Gertrough,  284. 
Gibbonston,  106. 
Gibston,  95,  96. 
Gifford,  49. 
Gilagh,  95. 
Gilliglas,  50. 
Gillrauston,  92. 
Gillston,  95. 
Gilltown,  265. 
Glanarme,  15,  16,  18. 
Glanarought,  168. 
Glancarvell,  24. 
Glancomkeyne,  250. 
Glandeboy,  9. 
Glandelagh,  235. 
Glandilore,  36. 
Glandore,  168,  236. 
Glanemagh,  239. 
Glanfyne,  248. 
Glanomera,  283. 
Glaskarge,  258. 
Glasscarrig,  56,  62. 

Glasse,  86. 

Glassepistell,  4,  5. 

Glean-an-Chroim,  279. 


Gleann,    168,  335. 

Glencarra,  277. 

Glencolumkille,  272. 

Glencorbraighe,  331. 

Glenflesk,  278,  282. 

Glengall,  165,  2S4. 

Glenmalure,  40,  45. 

Glenmore,  276. 

Gleveckloan,  96. 

Glin,  53,  59,  283. 

Glinsk,  273. 

Glomemore,  7. 

Glynnes,  The,  13,  15,  17,  18,  42, 
250,  261. 

Godolphin,  245. 

Golding,  38,  48,  95,  106. 

Golmoorstown,  48. 

Goodall,  96. 

Goodman,  39,  151. 

Goorte,  134. 

Gorchins,  61. 

Gore,  263,  266. 

Gorey,  63. 

Gormagan,  254. 

Gormanstone,    92,  93,  94,   225, 
226,  268,  349 

Gortenacuppoge,  273. 

Gorst,  253. 

Gort,  Viscount,   284. 

Gortgrenane,  281. 
Gortineeher,  280. 

Gortnamona,  268. 

Gortrassy,  276. 

Gorvey,  94. 

Gough,  164,  350. 

Gould,  167,  182,  183,   279,  29I. 

Goulding,  253. 

Gowlding,  94. 

Gowran,  66,  67,  71,  254. 

,,     Grange,  267. 
Grace,  67,   70,   226,    254,  255, 

266,  349. 
Gragene,  256. 
Gragrobben,  257. 
Granahan,  272. 
Granard,  114,  261. 
Grange,  The,  5,  38,  39,  48;  253, 

283. 
Grange   Castle,  72. 
Grangowin,  255. 
Grant,   72,    162,    164,    167,  255, 

277,  289. 
Grantstovvn,  267. 
Gratkerock,  58. 
Gratz,  162. 
Graves,  73. 
Graye,  62. 
Greame,  48,  49,  252. 


Great  Fornaughts,  265. 
Great  Ardes,  ir,  12. 
Green-Castle,  12,  31,  32. 
Greenfields,  185. 
Greenore,  60. 
Grehan,  72,  2S0. 
Grenan,  68. 

Grenanstown,  269,  284. 
Greville,  270. 
Grey,  194. 
Griphy,  292. 
Grogan,  261. 
Growe,  254. 
Growgane,  256. 
Gruanfurt,  254. 
Guatemala,  1621 
Guillamore,  283. 
Gun,  283. 

Gurteen,  254,  255,  277. 
Guyre,  91,  352. 
Gwery,  258. 
Gyanan,  289. 
Gybbes,  66. 

H 
Hacket,  38,  352. 
Hacketstown,  164. 
Hacklee,  III. 
Hadsor,  5- 
Hagans,  21,  24,  26. 
Hah.  (Howth?)  238. 
Hacket.  66. 
Hall,  the,  256. 
Halvestown,  252. 
Haly,  197,  284,  289,  290. 
Hambige,  94. 
Hamill,  344. 

Hamilton,  10,  II,  271,  350. 
Hamlin,  38,   94,    101,  290,  291. 
Hammondstovvn.  260. 
Hamon,  91,  94,  III,  352. 
Hane,  256. 

Harberston,  48,  99,  252. 
Hardwell,  48. 
Harman,  253. 
Hare,  256,  257. 
Harestown,  256. 
Harperstown,  62,  266. 
Harpole,  53,  350. 
Harpoole,  78,  79,  253. 
Harrington,   37,  43,  45,  48,  76, 

245.  350. 
Hartpoole,  253. 
Hartley  Mauduit,  263. 
Harvey.  93,  102. 
Haskinston,  III. 
Hasquin,  252. 
Hasson,  62. 

3  a 


37° 


INDEX. 


Ilatton,  94,  185. 

Hauberston,  253. 

Havens,  238. 

Howlet,  48. 

Hay,  59. 

Hea,  256. 

Headborough,  281. 

Heath, 

Hegan,  208. 

Herbert,  43,  48, 82,  269. 

Herbertstown,  93. 

Herford,  67. 

Hetherington,  79. 

Hewitt,  39. 

Hickie,  271. 

Hickson,  283. 

Hide,  93. 

Higgins,  275. 

Higgs,  252. 

Hi-Kinselagh,  63. 

Hill,  94,  95,  100,  266. 

Hill's  Court,  282. 

Hillswood,  274. 

Hinch  The,  39. 

Hoar,  256,  257. 

Hodnett,  269. 

Hogan,  208,  283. 

Holde,  94. 

Holdhall,  257. 

Holicrosse,  211, 

Holywood,  28,    93,    285, 

290 
Holme-Patrick,  37. 
Holmpatrick,  38,  239. 
Holstein,  73. 
Hoodgrove,  71. 
Hooke,  59,  61,  164. 
Hoorton,  59. 
Hops,  104. 
Hore,  62,  164,  266. 
Horsfall,  235. 
Hovendon,  79. 

„         Captain,  22. 
Howeli  67. 
Howling,  67,  255. 
Howth,  1,  37,  92,  97,  227, 

272,  349. 
Hughstown,  277. 
Hullen,  91. 
Humble,  277. 
Huntingdon,  277. 
Huntstown,  38. 
Hurlestone,  5. 
Hurley,  201,  283,  352. 
Hussey,  95,  96,  99,  232,  282, 
Huysceethy,  54. 
Hyde,  281. 
Hyde  Park,  107. 


Hy-Many,  274. 


Ibaun,  224. 

Iberton,  255. 

Ibrackan,  221. 

Ichers,  93. 

Ida,  255. 

Idrone,  51,  64,  253. 

Idough,  54,  71,  255. 

Igroin,  255. 

Ikethy,  252. 

Ila,  30. 

Hand  Castle,  109. 

Hand  Magie,  13,  14. 

Ildefonse,  162. 

Illanstrassock,  258. 

Imokillie,  179. 

Inch,  284. 

Inchequin,   126,   127,  228,    272, 

349- 

Inchy  O'Fogarty,  284. 

Ingland,  148,  152. 

Inisbafin,  238. 

Inishannon,  167. 

Inishowen,  32,  263,  337. 

[niskillen,  25,  227,  248. 

Inistiuge,  66,  67,  68. 
1  Inniscoe,  275. 

Inniskae,  239. 
286,  1  Inver,  238. 

Ionoclestowne,  256. 
•  Iregan,   79. 

Ireland's  Eye,  36. 

Iriell,  23. 

Irish  Exiles,  341. 
1  Irishtown,  95,  96. 

Itchinghane,  256. 

Isham,  62. 

Isle  of  Wight,  280. 

Iveragh,  168. 

Ivers,  94,  95,  97. 


Jacob,  252. 
263,  Jacobus,  St.,  99. 

Jamestown,  270. 

Jansenius,  286. 

Jenkinstown,  266. 

Jephson,  43. 

Jesucellin,  92. 

Jesuits,  290,  295,  340,  348. 
I  Jobston,  38. 

Johnston,  46,  50,  61,  100,  357. 
352    Johnstown,  265,  275. 

Jones,    91,   97,    103,   233,   234, 
244.  269,  352. 

Jordan,  9,  38.  205,  275. 


Jordanstown,  93,  96. 
Jura,  30. 

K 
Kalbally,  239. 
Karne  The,  104. 
Karron,  67. 
Kavanagh,   (see  Cavanagh)   41, 

62,  67,  76,  253,  254,  256,  265. 
Kealy,  66. 

Kearney,  268,  283,  284,  352. 
Keating,    50,    52,   60,   96,  256, 

257,  266,  288. 
Keelan-a-long,  88. 
Keenan,  236. 
Kell,  67. 
Kellis,  13,  14. 
Kells,  90,  91,  101,  255. 
Kelly,  223,  252,  274,  276,   277, 

287,  288. 
Kenmare,  279,  280,  282. 
Kenna,  252. 
Kennadies,  212. 
Kenny,  235,  266. 
Kent,  60,  93,  94,  99. 
Keogh,  283. 
Keppoch,  5,  39. 
Keranston,  96. 
Kerbs,  255. 
Kerovan,  237. 
Kerry,   156,  167,   170,  187,  195 

240,  263,  271,  278,  280,  282, 

284. 
Kerrycurrihy,  167,  280. 
Keudagh,  279. 
Kidderminster,  233. 
Kieran,  St.,  99. 
Kieran,  390. 
Kierie,  239. 
Kilamonine,  254. 
Kilary,  255. 
Kilayne,  254. 
Kilballyowen,  283. 
Kilbeggan,  38,  104. 
Kilberagha,  255. 
Kilboy,  94. 
Kilbracan,  253. 
Kilbreede,  254. 
Kilbrew,  93,  94,  99. 
Kilbride,  94,  95,   97,   107,  258, 

283. 
Kilbrogan,  281. 
Kilcarne,  93,  99. 
Kilcaskan,  281. 
Kilcashe,  284. 
Kilclogher,  57,  239,  266. 
Kilcoan,  266. 
Kilconelin,  56. 


INDEX. 


371 


Kilconnell,   135. 

Kilconyney,  253. 

Kilcorney,  271. 

Kilcoursey,  84,  268,  282. 

Kilcowan,  60. 

Kilcullen,  44,  226,  230. 

Kildalkey,  96. 

Kildare,  35,  36,  41,  44,  45,  49, 

51,  61,  81,  82,  90,    106,  112, 

231,  240,  252. 
Kildare,  Town,  44,  65,  66,  70, 

72,    73,    241,    252,   260,  261, 

264,  265,  328. 
Kildare,  Earl,  217,  252,  264. 349. 
Kildare,  Bishop  of  81.  235,  265, 

286. 
Kildergan,  74. 
Kildowdy,  258. 
Kildrought,  252. 
Kilfeacle,  215. 
Kilfeneraghe,  125. 
Kilferagh,  69,  255. 
Kilgholm,  239. 
Kilgorey,  279. 
Kilgrage,  101. 
Kilgreany,  253. 
Kilheele,  48,  252. 
Kilhobock,  56. 
Kilhussey,  48. 
Kilkallatin,  254. 
Kilkea,  245. 
Kilkele,  239. 
Kilkenny,  Co.  56,  207,  208,  240, 

254,  266,  267,  277,  284. 
Kilkenny  City,  67,  70,  98,  254, 

289. 
Kilkenny,  West,  99,   102,    104. 
Kilkevan,  256. 
Kilkerell,  255. 
Kilkregan,  254,  255. 
Kilkullin,  253. 
Killagh,  274. 
Killagher,  2S2. 
Killala,  237. 
Killaloe,   Bishop   of   115,    236, 

237,  271,  274,284,  28b. 
Ktllalon,  in. 
Killany,  5,  264. 
Killare,  104. 
Killarie,  94. 
Killasonna,  270. 
Killa,  280. 
Killaughe,  106. 
Killconkey,  256. 
Killcowlen,  259. 
Killeen,  105,  268,  269,  349. 
Killeglan,  38,  93. 
Killegagre,  38. 


Killeigh,  75. 

Killelongart,  254. 

Killelton,  271. 

Killen,  252. 

Killenan,  103,  107. 

Killencowle,  260. 

Killenfaghney,  104. 

Killenkillie,  239. 

Killensu,  257. 

Killeon,  103. 

Killerghe,  38. 

Killester,  38. 

Killglass,  144. 

Killian,  256. 

Killineighnan,  95. 

Killinessan,  95. 

Killiney,  283. 

Killmanahan,  257. 

Killmehell,  258. 

Killmurry,  283. 

Killnehell,  258. 

Killollegha,  255. 

Killoncowle,   5. 

Killough,  260. 

Killoutry,  2. 

Killovany,  257. 

Killowen,  283. 

Killpatrick,  258. 

Killred,  255. 

Killrowe,  93. 

Killta,  253. 

Killtymen,  258. 

Killua,  282. 

Killuber,  104. 

Killulto,  2,  7,  8,  II,  28. 

Killyan,  62,  233,  265. 

Killyen,  93. 

Killymore,  274. 

Kilm,  165. 

Kilmacduagh,  131,  237,  287. 

Kilmacoole,  98. 

Kilmadin,  165,  166. 

Kilmaine,  275. 

Kilmainham,  348. 

Kilmaledie,  85. 

Kilmallock,  107,  229,  279,  283, 

332- 

Kilmanahim  Castle,  165. 

Kilmannaigh,  257. 

Kilmarocke,  37. 

Kilmarton,  100. 

Kilmerrish,  3 1 . 

Kilmlapock,  253. 

Kilmodalin,  226. 

Kilmodally,  255. 

Kilmore,  38,  63,  121,  235,  285, 

2S7. 
Kilmorey  260. 


Kilmac  Thomas,  165. 

Kilmurry,  277. 

Kilnacrott,  271. 

Kil  O'Donnel,  31. 

Kilree,  253,  255. 

Kilrmdony,  255. 

Kilruane,  270. 

Kilruddery,  264. 

Kilrue,  269. 

Kilshany,   168. 

Kilshaughlin,  37. 

Kilsheshane,  215. 

Kilshrewly,  271. 

Kilskeagh,  273. 

Kilsoghlie,  39. 

Kiltannon,  272. 

Kilternan,  289. 

Kiltimon,  263,  281. 

Kiltober,  107. 

Kiltulla,  273. 

Kiltullagh,  273. 

Kilulto,  6,  7,  11. 

Kilune,  48. 

Kilvashlan,  62. 

Kilwarlin,  2,  6,  8. 

Kilwarten,  8. 

Kilwinny,  278. 

Kilworth,  281. 

Kinalea,  85. 

Kinaleaghe,  270. 

Kinalewarten,  6,  8. 

Kinalmeaky,  278. 

Kincleartie,  8. 

Kinel-Connel,  34. 

Kinel-Owen,  260. 

Kindellane,  95. 

King,  38,  96,  277,  350. 

King's  County,  35,  44,  76,  77, 
78,  81,  83,  84,  86,  87,  88,  90, 
92,  102,  240,  241,  268. 

Kingsland,  37,  270. 

Kingston,  277. 

Kingstown,  83,  98. 

Kinnafad,  92. 

Kinnalmeaky,  168. 

Kinnals,  167. 

Kinsale,  1,  171,  229,  233,  238, 
278,  281,  349. 

Kinsellagh,  56,  57, 61. 

Kinvarre,  239. 

Kirwan,  271,  273,  274. 

Kissak,  38. 

Kirvarlin,  6. 

Knapton,  267. 

Knaresborough,  66,  72. 

Knight,  233. 

Knightstown,  269. 

\  Knock  Abbey,  271. 


372 


INDEX. 


Knockconor,  99. 

Knockcosger,  104. 

Knocke,  95,  101. 

Knocklough, 

Knockfergus    Bay,  6,    II,    38, 

244. 
Knock  la  Glynche,  34. 
Knocklig,  201. 
Knocklofty,  165. 
Knockmarke,  95. 
Knockmoan,  166. 
Knockmoella,  255. 
Knocknagur,  273. 
Knockscur,  253. 
Knocktopher,  67,  69,  255. 
Knockyngen,  38. 
Kowlungiste,  259. 
Kyan,  262. 
Kylbrowe,  100. 
Kyledonoghoue  Killy,  72. 
Kyllyne,  92. 
Kylmorry,  252. 


Laccagh,  252. 

Lacie,  67,  200,  205,  257,  330. 

Lade,  15. 

Ladie  Rath,  94. 

Laffan,  61,  350. 

Laffer,  25. 

Lalor,  80,  267,  2S6. 

Lambay,  36,  239. 

Lambert,    57,    6o,    73,  74,   245, 

266,  271,  350. 
Lanan,  31. 
Lanesborough,  276. 
Landsdowne,  282. 
Langton,66,  71,  72,  287,321,351 
Laragh,  47,  50,  104,  107. 
Larha,  274. 
Larne,  15,  18. 
Laspelston,  39. 
Latin,  286,  252. 
Laughanston,  39. 
Lawless,  66,  72. 
Lawrence,  274. 
Lea,  42,  43,  49,  50,  163. 
Leamlara,  278. 
Leap,  The  168. 

Leas  or  Lees,  163,  2S9,  292,  293. 
Lease,  78. 
Leath,  163. 
Leaugh,  253. 
Lecagh  Castle,  45,  47. 
Leek,  39. 
Lechaell,  8,  9. 

Ledwich,  72,  95,   105,  110,352. 
Lee,  45,  46,  93,  100,  284. 


Lefallyan,  254. 

Leganlic,  261. 

Leigh,  12. 

Leighlin,  51,    52,   53,  234,  244, 

253.  256. 
Leinerocke,  53,  122. 
Leinich,  290,  344. 
Leins,  96. 
Leinster,  3,  46,  135,  235,  236, 

264,  271,  298,  302,  304,  325, 

327- 
Leipsig,  73. 
Leitrim,  2,  24.  1 13,  120,  123,  134, 

147,  266,   276,  277,  300,  303. 
Leix,  74,  75,  76,  78,   79,  80,  86, 

231,  267,  328. 
Lemavadie,  249. 
Lemonfield,  274. 
Leixlip,  44,  48,  49,  252,  265. 
Lenough,  34. 
Lenan,  290. 
Lenigan,  281. 
Lentaigne,  161,  169. 
Le  Poer,  72. 
Lescartan,  94,  95,  100. 
Lesmollen,  91.  93,  97,  99. 
Lettybrook,  265. 
Leverough,  36. 
Leweston,  62. 
Lewin,  272. 
Lewis,  62. 

Lexnaw,  190,  191,  230. 
Ley,  66,  244,  246,  257. 
Leyn,  254. 
Licianstown,  93. 
Lickdovvne,  201. 
Liegan,  226. 
Lifter,  25,  30,  31,  32,  249,   250, 

262. 
Lighe,  79. 
Limerick.  Co.,   125,    156,    158, 

169,  188,   196,  216,  229,  234. 

241,  244,  274,   278,  283,  2S6. 
Limerick   Cittie,  196,  283,   284, 

289,  300. 
Limevadie,  28,  89. 
Linch,  39,  95,  96,  101,  132,  235, 

274,  275,  291. 
Lincol,  289. 
Lingstown,  58. 
Lington,  18. 
Liscarrol,  225. 
Liscarton,  92. 
Lisheens,  279,  281. 
Lislee,  278,  279. 
Lismain,  68. 
Lismallon,  284. 
Lismora,  158,  159.  166,  233. 


Lismoyne,  104. 
Lismoyny,  83. 
Lisnabin,  264. 
Lisnawilly,  264. 
Lisnegan.  278. 
Lisquinlan,  278,  281. 
Lisregghan,  274. 
Lissadill,  266. 
Lissinuskie,  85. 
Lister. 

Listrange,  152. 
Lisurgh,  257. 
Little,  266. 
Little  Cappoth,  252. 
Little  Frefan,  95. 
Little  Island,  267,  277. 
Little  Rath,  252. 
Lixnaw,  190,  191,  349. 
Lobenstone,  94. 
Lock,  39. 

Loch  Gorman,  303. 
Lodi,  282. 

Loftus,  37,43.5°.  57.79.  256,264 
Logh,  58. 
Loghbracon,  94. 
Loghgiel,  261. 
Loghmoe,  212,  289. 
Loghtie,  23. 
Loghuen,  239. 

Lombard,  164,  166,  285,  291. 
Londonderry,  262. 
Long,  46,  167,  252. 
Longfield,  300. 

Longford,  89,  90,  102,  113,  116, 
148,  149,  231,  240,  267,   270, 

271. 
Lords  passing,  2 1 7,  349. 
Lorknan,  67. 
Lota,  279. 

Lougharlachnought,  108. 
Loughbrickland,  265. 
Luughcrey,  96. 
Lough  Earne,  297. 
Lougherne,  24 
Loughfoyle,  230,  238. 
Loughmey,  (see  Loghmoe'  216. 
Loughglynne,  275,  276. 
I.oughgoure,  93. 
Lough  Hyne,  168. 
Loughrowe,  24. 
Loughshearnes,  213. 
Loughsv/illy,  239. 
Louth,    2,  3,   5,  24,  33,  88,  90, 

94,   98,    100.   231,   232,    240, 

260,  271,  296,  349. 
Lough'on,  39. 
Loughty,  23. 
Louvain,  162,  286, 


INDEX. 


373 


Lovell,  72. 

Lowgrange,  69. 

Lowyston,  68. 

Loynes,  97. 

Lucan,  37,  50,  ioo,  262,  275. 

Luffane,  257. 

Lamaigh,  258. 

Lurgan  Rac,  233. 

Luske,  36. 

Lusmagh,  83. 

Luston,  93. 

Luttrell,  39,  95.  97.  9§.  >°5.  263. 

Luttrelstone.37,39,  105,263,349 

Lye,  66,  252. 

Lyle,  279. 

Lynam,  95,  96. 

Lyons,  46,  4S,  107,  234,  236. 

Lyrath,  254. 

Lysaght,  279. 

Lystmayne,  256. 

Lyster,  71. 

Lysterfield,  277. 

M 

McAdam,  (Barry)  183,  278. 

McAdin,  277. 

McAlexander,  80. 

McAndrew,  194. 

McAronlby,  16. 

McArte,  7,  8, 19, 24, 34, 250, 257. 

McArtmore,  259. 

McAtagart,  279. 

McAuly     100,    102,    104,    108, 

no,  128  167,  169,  176,  270. 
McAwliffe,  169,  176,  177,  279. 
McAwnly,  16. 
McBardill,  285,  287. 
McBaron,  23,  34,  251,  322. 
McBrady,   1 18,  120. 
McBrane,  257,  258,  259. 
McBrasil,  136. 
McBrenan,  151. 
McBrene,  257,  258,  259. 
McBrian,   11,   13,  34,  88,    145, 

157,    194,  201,  212,  253,  331. 
McCabe,  247. 

McCahir,  32,  53,  63,  258,  259. 
McCann,  20,  25 1.  261. 
McCanna,  261. 
McCanny,  205. 
McCamock,  16. 
McCarr,  258. 
McCartan,  8. 
McCarthy,  8,  157,  158,  160,  16S, 

178,   1S3,   185,   187,  194.  '95. 

20I>  205,  219,  221,  222,  225. 

229,  230,  239,  278,  279,  280. 

283.  335.  35°- 


McCawell,  102,  253,  297. 
McCawer,  53. 
McClanchy,   125,    126,  127, 
129,  130,  149,  199,  205,   206, 

3°o.  338- 
McCleyne,  27. 
McClintock,  263. 
McClosky,  249. 
McCnavin,  139. 
McCochlan,  35,  81,  82,  83,  III, 

112,  132,  213,  268. 
McCogh,  152. 
McConmea,  124. 
McConnell,  15,  16,  31,  32. 
McConnor,  124,  127. 
McConsidine,  127. 
McCoolechan,  6,  139. 
McCooly,  24. 
McCorcran,  87. 
McCorman,  193. 
McCormac,  177,  178,  182,    186, 

194,  258. 
McCostilagh,      140,     141,    232, 

275- 
McCotter,  279. 
McCragh,    127,    163,    206,   208, 

215,  233,  234,  2S6,  288. 
McCreen,  258. 
McCrohan,  168,  194. 
McCrossan,  193,  282. 
McCrylly,  283. 
McCual,  285. 
McCullenan,  231. 
JfcDa,  206. 
McDamore,  56,  63. 
McDarig,  258. 
McDavy,  135,  153,  155. 
McDermond,  155,  157,  174. 
McDermot,  56,    123,    144,    150, 

«5>>    '53.    254,     257,    258, 

276. 
McDongonry,  31. 
McDonnell,   15,    16,   17,  26,  34, 

43-  79.  80,  85,   115,  124,  138, 

170,  183,  194,  254,  257,  258, 

259.  261,  337. 
McDonogh,   139,   144,  145,  157, 

167,  168,   169,   174,   178,  209, 

223,  225,  254,  256,  258,  337, 

338,  35°- 
McDonoghoe,  72. 
McDonologe,  32. 
McDowny,  136. 
McDuff,  32. 
McDuilechan,  6. 
McDurlaigh,  258. 
McEae,  206. 
McEdmond,  36,  70.    115,   135. 


136,  151,  154,  183,  191,  257, 

258,  259. 
McEdward,  43. 
McEf,  258,  259. 

McEgan,  28,  208,  214,  215,  284. 
McElligott,   190,   191,  193,  236. 
McEnaw,  147. 
McEnery,  125. 
McEnn,  257. 
McEnroe,  118. 
McErydry,  143. 
McEvally,  29. 
McEvilly,  138,  143. 
McEvoy,  80,  96. 
McFeagh,  40,  63,  64,  78. 
McFirbis,  147. 
McFollan,  132. 
McFun,  190. 
McFynyn,   125,    177,  187,    188, 

190,  192,  194. 
McGagh,  157,  193. 
McGarrett,   154,    166,    206,  253, 

254,  258,  259. 
McGauran,  121,  2S5. 
McGenis,  6,  7,  8,  13,  19,  33,  34, 

80,  257,  258,  259,  260. 
McGeoghagan,     83,    104.     107, 

108,  109,  112,  270. 
McGibbon,  144. 
McGie,  13. 
McGilfoyle,  87,  215. 
McGillapatrick,   35,  74,   76,  79, 

330. 
McGillegan,  249,  297. 
McGillicuddy,  168, 187, 190,  193, 

236,  2S2. 
McGillo-Newlan,  1 77. 
McGlane,  148. 

McGranel,   147,   149,  276,   300. 
McGray,  190. 
McGuire,   23,    24,   25,   33,   121. 

148,  247,  262,  319,  322,  323. 
McGuyvelin,  31. 
McGyleragh,  127. 
McHenrick,  163. 
McHenry,  21,  23,  34,   135,   191, 

251. 
McHubberd,  54,  136, 
McHubert,  338. 
McHugh,  8,  17,  iS,   36,  39,  42, 

115.  x37>  155,  254- 
McHugh  Duff,  31,  33. 
Mcl-Brian-Arra,   88,  207,    208, 

214,  284. 
Mcjordan,  140,  141,  143,  275. 
McKay,  16. 
McKeen,  258. 
McKenee,  258. 


374 


IXDEX. 


McKenna,  322. 

McKeon,  16. 

McKeough,  205. 

McKerra,  (Castle)  143. 

McKilkelly,  136. 

McKowge,  136. 

McKowlse,  259. 

McLaffan,  61. 

McLisagh,  258. 

McLoghlin,  32,   124,   125,    147, 

300. 
McMahon,  3,  20,  23,  24,  33,  34, 

87,    121,    124,    I25.    126,    128, 
206,  23I,    257,    271,    272,  285, 

336.  338,  351- 
McMajoke,  163. 
McMalachlin,  259. 
McManus,  31,  151. 
McMaurice,  (McMorris)  50,  57, 

140,  193,  225,  230,  253,  282, 

335.  349. 
McMawen,  257. 
McMiertagh,  257,  258. 
McMoigh,  257. 
KcMorghe,  206. 
McMoriartagh,    157,    190,    191, 

"94.  257. 
McMoragh,  45,  52,    53,    54,  62, 

65,  127,  128,  254,  257,  258. 
McMorris,  140,  143. 
McMortogh,  42,  253. 
McMoussoge,  258. 
McMoyler,  135. 
McMulmurry,  206. 
McMurry,  147. 
McNachton,  261. 
McNamara,  124,  130,  222,  271, 

272,  288,  336. 
McNeill,  7,  8,  II,  18,  21. 
McNygel,  16. 
McOdo,  167. 
McO'Nulles,  13. 
McOwen,  182,  194. 
McOyn,  257,  258. 
McPhadden,  140. 
McPhelim,  II,  13,  258. 
McPherson,  259. 
McPhilip,  206. 
McPhilpin,  144. 
McQuillin,  13,  17,  31. 
McRedmond,  135,  136. 
McRicard,  206. 
McRicharci,  253. 
McRory,  8,  74,  124,  256. 
McRoss,  258. 
McShane,  34,  135,  167.  190,  191, 

254,  258. 
McShanery,  125. 


McSheehy,  183,   191,   194, 

204,  206. 
McShemes,  259. 
McShemon,  258. 
McSheron,  254. 
McShida,  125. 
McSimon,  254. 
McSleyne,  27,  148. 
McSureton,  232. 
McSurley,  15,  17,  34- 
McSwiny,  29,  32,   33,  34, 

135,   136,   144,   145,  148, 

155,  157.  158,  173-  "75. 

178,  186,  248,  279. 
McTeg,  125,  145,  157,  167, 

173.  >74.  175.  >7«.  185. 

253-  257- 
McTelligh,  121, 
McTerlagh,  34,    121,    144, 

251. 
McTernan,  147. 
McThomas,  137,  13S,  206, 
McThomyne,  135,  144. 
McTibbot,  137. 
McTighe,  206. 
McTowaltagh,  151. 
McUlick,  190,  191. 
McVadin,  146. 
McVadock,  56,  63. 
McWalter,  88,  135. 
McWilliam,  29,   34,    123, 

140,  141,  275,  308,  338. 
He  y  Gilles,  10. 
McVllrem,  258. 
McYnnes,  13,  258,  259 
Macetown,  93. 
Machill,  66. 
Macroom,  185. 
Madden,  72,  161,  163,  274. 
Magheraleny,  145. 
Magheramorne,  58, 
Magh  Rein,  276. 
Maglass,  256. 
Magner,   179. 
Magonitry,  187. 
Malahide,  37,  38,  106,  238, 
Malbie,  113,  115,  150,  154, 
Mallefort,  182,  183. 
Mallow,  171,  183,  186,281, 

334- 
Malone,  in,  291- 
Mandeville,  10,  162,   163,  2 
Mang,  187. 
Mangen,  39. 
Manglisse,  259. 
Mannering,  254. 
Mansfield,  265,   277. 
Mantua,  266. 


199. 


127, 
J  77. 

168, 
193' 


I9°> 
258. 


'32. 


263. 
•73- 

282, 


77- 


Manulla,  275. 

Mape,  95,  101. 

Mape-Rath,  95,  10 1. 

Mapston,  101. 

Marble  Hill,  273. 

Marchell,  66. 

Hargue,  167. 

Marinel,  210. 

Mariner,  208. 

Markham,  85,  102. 

Marranston,  102. 

Marshall,  66. 

Marshalstown,  95,  209,  259. 

Martel,  182,  352. 

Martelston,  182. 

Martin,  133,  137,274. 

Marwarde,  232. 

Mary's  Abbey,  348. 

Maryborough,  75,   78,  244,  327. 

Mason,  39. 

Mastersone,  50,  56,  57,  64,  228, 

253-256,350. 
Mastoston,  94. 
Matthews,  285,  352. 
Mattei,  34. 

Mayler,  (see  Meyler)  61. 
Mayne,  no,  187,  1S8,  259. 
Maynooth,  44,  260. 
Mayo,  123,  140,  144,   150,   237, 

240,  273,  274,  275,  277,  300. 
Meade,  167,  279. 
Meaghe,  171,  182,  183,  197. 
Meagher,  209. 
Measton,  93. 
Meath,  I,  2,  35,  36,  44,  46,  89, 

92,  93.  94,  95.  IC|2.  >°4.  106, 

234,  237,  240,  241,  244,  268, 

303,  328. 
Meehan,  287. 
Meelick,  274. 
Melaghe,  53. 
Melans,   250. 
Meleck,  104. 
Meleeke,  134. 
Mellefont,  260. 
Menlo,  133,  272. 
Menrice,  32. 
Meredith,  265. 
Merlinstovvn,  4. 
Merrifield,  163. 
Merriman,   5- 
Merrion,  37,  38. 
Meskill,  182. 
Mey,  94. 
Meylaughe,  92. 
Meyler,   (and    Mayler)    58,    61, 

164,  165,  227,    257. 
Meynlagh,  145. 


INDEX. 


375 


Meyres,  252. 

Michmore,  95. 

Middlethird,  20. 

Middleton,  194. 

Milbome,  42. 

Milltown,  135,  277. 

Milton,  103,  109,  no,  255,  276. 

Misset,  16,  48,  95,  96,  100. 

Mitchellstown,  94. 

Moat  Farrell,  114. 

Mocollop,  165. 

Mockler,  208,  209,  215. 

Mocklerstown,  215. 

Moetullen,  130. 

Mogangolic,  58. 

Moghenees,  126. 

Moglass,  215. 

Mohearnain,  284. 

Mohill,  277. 

Moghoony,  127. 

Molahae,  99, 

Mollenlyeth,  109. 

Mollinmighan,  103,  no. 

Molyneux,  264. 

Molony,  272. 

Monaghan,   2,   3,    23,   24,   120, 

241,  261,  262,  296. 
Monalstrum,  257. 
Monasterevan,  36,  45,  75. 
Monaster  Orys,  82. 
Moncell,  215. 
Moncktown,  37. 
Monclough,  257. 
Moneanimie,  278. 
Moneycrower,  275. 
Monganagh,  248. 
Monganestone,  259. 
Mongaroe,  258. 
Monilea,  107. 
Monivea,  133,  273. 
Monkstown,  167. 
Monroe  Lististy,  215. 
Montaghs,  300. 
Montauban,  274. 
Montgomerie,  II,  234,  350. 
Montpellier,  279. 
Monyvilleog,  58. 
Moone,  253. 
Mooney,  50. 
Moore,  4,  5,  82,  85,  91,  94,  95, 

96,  101,  in,   194,    233,  245, 

260,  274,  281,  283. 
Moore  Abbey,  260. 
Mooreston,  100. 
Mor,  258,  259. 
Moran,  287. 

More,  85,  168,  292,  301,  390,  350 
Morenstown,  95,  IOI. 


Moreton,  38,  48,  99,  105,  106, 
269. 

Moretown,  208,  252. 

Morett,  75,  79. 

Morgan,  50,  152,  163,  164,  261, 
291,  292. 

Moriarty.  188. 
j  Morlow,  96. 

Morne  Park,  260. 

Mornigane,  190. 

Mornin,  105,  114,  115,  270, 
271. 

Mornington,  228,  264,  265. 

Morphue,  254. 

Morres,  68. 

Morrice,  133,  194,  288. 

Morris,  268. 

Morristown  Lattin,  265,  277. 

Morrough,  254. 

Morska,  275. 

Morty,  291. 

Moryson,  102,  245. 

Mostyne,  129. 

Moteing,  67. 
,  Mothell,  255. 
j  Mothinsey,  43. 

Moumecloigh,  258. 

Mouncktown,  93. 

Mounsell,  67. 

Mount  Bellew,  260. 

Mountgarret,  56,  61,  62,  64,  67, 
°9>  72>  73>  2I2>  226,  254,  266, 
335.  349. 

Mount  Hawk,  284. 

Mountjoy,  75,  77,  249. 

Mount  Leinster,  60. 

Mountmorris,  284. 

Mountnorth,  279. 

Mount  Palles,  263. 

Mount  Pleasant,  268. 

Mount  Talbot,  263. 

Mourney,  6. 

Moville,  32. 

Mowberry,  15. 

Moy,  145. 

Moyagher,  96, 

Moyaliffe,  212. 

Moyartagh,  129. 

Moycarkey,  209. 

Moyashal,  108. 

Moycashie!,  83,  104,  107,  109. 

Moycullen,  137. 

Moygare,  92. 

Moygarry,  145. 

Moyglare,  49,  95,  96,  22S. 

Moygare,  92. 

Moyhill,  253,  254. 
I  Moylagh,  96,  97,  99. 


Moylaghoo,  96. 

Moyle,  24. 

Moybury,  153. 

Moylehussey,  95,  in. 

Moymmer,  258. 

Moymet,  92,  94,  99. 

Moyna,  275. 

Moynally,  50. 

Moyne,    144,    147,    238,     273, 

274. 
Moynealty,  95,  99. 
Moynengeanagh,  124. 
Moynish,  147. 
Moyntertagan,  81. 
Moynterrolis,  148. 
Moyobracan,  127. 
Moyoise,  104. 
Moyrath,  loo,  105. 
Moyrit,  79. 
Moyvally,  92. 
Moyvore,  III,  270. 
Muchardroms,  95. 
Muchalton,  IOI. 
Muchwodd,  257. 
Muchalstown,  269. 
Muckland,  50. 
Mucklane,  257. 
Mucknoe,  19. 
Muckross,  194. 
Muctionoe,  20. 
Muinter-Vary,  186. 
Mullahassse,  47. 
Mouldowny,  287. 
Mull,  no. 
Mullagha,  94. 
Mullaghenonie,  209. 
Mullaghgane,  261. 
Mullaghmore,  274. 
Mullagrash,  252. 
Mullinderry,  266. 
Mullingar,  107,  in,  115,  325. 
Mulloy,  83,  277, 
Mulpit,  273. 

Mulrancan,  59,  225,  256. 
Mulrian,  200. 
Mulron,  390. 
Munckton,  37. 
Munster,  1,  2,  156,  181,  186,  195, 

237,  241,  247,  281,   303.  330, 

343- 
Murphy,  352. 
Muscry,  208,  308. 
Muscry-Wherk,  208. 
Mushanaglass,  186. 
Musketry,  157,    167.    168,    261, 

283. 
Muyno,  124. 
Myagh,  157,  197. 


3  76 


INDEX. 


Myller,  289. 
Mynloch,  135. 
Myross,  279. 
Myshall,  271. 
Myssell,  254. 
Mysett,  252. 

N 
Naale,  38. 
Naas,  35,  44,  47,  48,  49,  50,  90, 

233,  252,  263. 
Nagle,  83,  171,  192,  278. 
Naish,  66,  206, 283,  290,352,  356 
Nail,  94,  97. 
Nangle,   92,   96,   103,  104,  no, 

113,  232,  252. 
Narraghe,  232. 
Naughton,   277. 
Naul,  92,  103. 
Xavan,   91,    92,  94,  95,  98,  99, 

101,  232. 
Xazeby,  47. 
Xeagh,  (see   Evagh  and  Eagh) 

20. 
Xeal  McBryan,  II. 
Xeale  The,  275. 
Neece,  15. 
Needham,  260. 
Nelson,  102. 
Netterville,   37,   39,  91,  94,  98, 

101,  269,  291,  349,  350. 
Neur,  56,  66,  68. 
Nevill,  62,  257. 
Nevinstown. 
Newbro  k,  276. 
Newcastle,  27,  30,  37,  39,  45, 

69,  92,  95,  103,  104,  106,  164, 

■99.  256. 
Newcastle  Prendergast,  284. 
Newforest,  273. 
Newhall,  47,  258. 
Newlande,  47,  231. 
Newmarket,  281. 
Newport,  275. 
Newrie,  6,  12,  33. 
New  Ross,  50,  58,  72,  226. 
Newton,  5,  47,  99. 
Newton  O'Clane,  252. 
Newton  O'More,  252. 
Newtown,   71,    250,    272,     273, 

274,  275. 
Newtown-Anner,  284. 
Neylan,  233. 
Neyles,  27. 
Nimestowne,  256. 
Niemann,  64. 
Nogha,  255. 
Nolan,  254.  290. 


Noraghe,  47,  50,  253. 

Normanton,  93. 

Norris,  5,  51,  33,  84,  186,  230, 
282,  350. 

Xorton,  18. 

Xorthampton,  281. 

Northerborne,  239. 

Nottingham,  46. 

Nuehowse,  4. 

Nugents,  5,  12,  34,  38,85,  93, 
99,  IOO,  IOI,  102,  I03,  I05, 
I06,  154,  162,  163,  166,  227, 
260,  270,    271,   290,    302,  349 

O 
Oakley,  281. 
Oak  Park,  263. 
O'Banan,  87. 
O'Beirne,    104,    151,    152,    153, 

203,  276. 
O'Bolger,  258. 

O' Boyle,  31,  32,  33,  34,  248,  285 
O'Breen,  in,  196. 
O'Brena,  255,  256. 
O'Brennan,  54,  72,  III,  190. 
O'Bric,  158. 
O'Brien,    59,    in,    124,  to  130. 

138,  163,  171,  172,  198,   201, 

202,  203,  214,  221,  222,  228, 

236,  271,  272,  2S4,  336,350. 
O'Burney,  104. 
O'Byme,  36,  40,  41,  42,  45,  50, 

53.    54.    I°4.    m.  264,    302, 

326,  331. 
O'Cahan,  28,  33,  34,   249,   262, 

289,  297,  322,  338. 
O'Callaghan,  157,  158,  167,  168, 

'75.  "76,  177.  '83.  '94.  279. 

297 
O'Carolan,  262. 
O'Carran,  215. 
O'Carroll,   82,  87,   88,  89,  207, 

215,  241,  268,  284,  330. 
O'Casy,  289. 
O'Cherony,  288. 
O'Clanchy,  129. 
O'Clery,  215,  288,  294,  295,  313. 
O'Coffy,  50,  139. 
O'Concannon,  135. 
O'Connell,  190,  282. 
O'Connery,  163. 
O'Connor,   32,    35,    78,  81,  83, 

85,  86,  91,  105,  126,  138,  141, 

145,  146,   152,   153,   155.  189. 

194,  219,  226,  230,   237,  268, 

295.  302,  327. 
O'Conor  Dun,    143,    150,    151, 

152,  276. 


O'Conor  Faly,  85,  86,  109. 
O'Connor  Kerry,  157,  189,  190, 

191,  192,  194. 
O'Conor   Roe,    123,    150,    151, 

276. 
O'Connor  Sligo,   123,  144,  145, 

275,  276. 
O'Corres,  250. 
O'Crean,  145,  275. 
O'Cowig,  167. 
O'Crowley,  158,   177,   186, 

229. 
O'Cullen,  177,  194,  201. 
O'Daly,  83,  88,   129,   134,  142, 

169,  177,  186,  194,  274,  294. 
O'Dea,  127,  129. 
O'Dempsy,    35,  49,  79,  So,  81, 

84. 
O'Der,  93. 

O'Devany,  285,  294. 
O'Devlin,  250. 
O'Devoy,  80. 
O'Docherty,  29,   30,  31,  32,  34, 

39,  250,  263,  337. 
O'Doghe,  255. 
O'Doiran,  257. 
O'Donelan,  139,  274. 
O'Donichan,  193. 
O'Donin,  186. 
O'Donnell,   24.  29,   30,   31,  33, 

34,  50,  51,  115,  122,  123,  142, 

145,  147,  149,  223,  238,  248, 

251,  262,   263,    302,  303,  304, 

308,  319,  337.  338,  355- 
O'Donnely,  22,  27. 
O'Donnoles,  250. 
O'Donoghue,  177,  187,282,  335, 
O'Donoghue   Glann,    187,    188, 

282. 
O'Donoghue  Mor,  187,  188. 
O'Donovan,   72,   177,  180,  186, 

187,  195,  279,  280. 
O' Dooly,  87. 
O'Doonelles,  26,  27. 
O'Doran,  80,  257. 
O'Dome,  254. 
O'Dowda,  144,  to  147,  275. 
O'Dowling,  80. 
O'Downy,  207. 
O'Driscol,    168,   172,    173,    176, 

177,  186,  191,  239,  280. 
O'Drycan,  256. 
O'Duigenan,  294. 
O'Dunn,  35,  73,  79,  80,  267. 
O'Dwyer,   177,   208,  209,    2lo, 

212,  213,331. 
,  O'Fahy,  138,  289. 
I  O' Faly,  81. 


INDEX. 


0/ 


7 


0' Fallon,  151,  154. 

O'Fane,  32. 

O'Fanet,  32. 

O'Felan,  158. 

O'Feolan,  163. 

O'Ferrall,  80,  89,  105,  109,  113, 

114,   115,  1 16,   226,  231,  267, 

270,  271,  286,  323,  350. 
O'Ffalie,  75,  81,85,  87,  217. 
O'Fiernagh,  134. 
O'Flaherties,  137.  138,141,273, 

274. 
O'Flanagan,  87,  151,  153,  277. 
O'Flinn,  151,  167. 
O'Foda,  132. 
O'Fogarty,  215,  284. 
O'Fox,  82,  84,  86,  in,  112. 
O'Furrie,  17. 
O'Gallagher,  29,  30,  31,  32,  248, 

276,  285,  287. 
O'Gallogan,  175. 
O'Gara,  145. 
O'Gardie,  129. 
O'Gilmore,  n. 
O'Glacan,  294. 
O'Goonagh,  196. 
O'Gormagan,  254. 
O'Gorman,  68. 
O'Gorhye,  288. 
O'Gormoghan,  54. 
O'Giady,  124,  125,  130,  283. 
O'Griffie,  127. 
O'Griffin,  187. 
O'Guin,  17,  34. 
O'Hagan,  21,  26,  34,  S4,  208, 

250,  251. 
O'Halagan,  29,  50. 
O'Halloran,  137,   139,  274. 
O'Hanlie,  151,  152,  153. 
O'Hanlon,    3,    19,    23,    34,  50, 

250,  323. 
O'Hara,  17,  144,  145,  261,  276. 
O'Harrie,  17,  350. 
O'Hart,  144,  145,  286. 
O'Healy,  186. 
O'Hegan,  186,  208. 
O'Heher,  193. 
O'Heine,  136,  139,  206. 
O'Heny,  297. 
O'Herlihy,  182,  186. 
O'Hery,  137. 
O'Hetheriscol,  239. 
O'Hicky,  46. 
O'Hiffeman,  209,  215. 
O'Higgins,  135,  275,  2S6. 
O'Hillane,  289. 
O'Hogan,   128,   129,   201,  208, 

215,  272,  238. 


O'Holen,  289. 
O'Hologlian,  137. 
O'Horan,  129,  13S. 
O'Hosy,   295. 

O'Hurly,  62,  177,201,227,229. 
O'Hynowran,  206. 
Oireacht-Redmond,  337. 
O'Kearney,   84,   210,  270,    284, 

285,  295. 
O'Keefe,    158,    167,     168,    169, 

175.  176,  177- 
O'Kelly,  50,  80,   132,  134,   136, 

151,  153,  154,  163,27310277. 
O'Kennedy,  208,  212,  213,  216, 

284. 
O'Lally,  138. 

0'Lalor,8,  80,236,  267,280,282. 
Old  Abbey,  69. 
Old  Aboy,  255. 
Oldcastle,  96. 
Oldcourt,  61,  257. 
Oldcross,  57. 
Olderfleet,    14,  15,  18,  238,  239, 

260. 
Oldtown,  253. 
O'Lery,  186,  187,  195,  279. 
O'Levy,  186. 
O'Loghlin,   126,    127,    129,  130, 

272,  337- 
O'Long,  186. 
Olortleighe,    257. 
O'Lughairen,  2S5. 
O'Lyne,  138. 
O'Madden,   112,   136,   139,  205, 

274. 
Omaghe,  27. 
O'Maghe,  140. 
O'Magher,    88,    163,   202,   208, 

209,  210,  214,  215,  216. 
O'Mahon,  168,  186. 
O'Mahon  Carbry,  158,  167,  168, 

177,  186. 
O'Mahon  Fionn,  158,   177,  186. 
O'Mahony,  177,  182,  280,  295. 
O'Mally,  140  to  144,  238,  275. 
O'Mallon,  34. 
O'Mannin,  134. 
O'Many,  132. 
O'Mare,  208. 
O'Meara,  234,  294. 
O'Melaghlins,  78,  102,  104,  112. 
O'Melies,  2,  24. 
O'Mey,  250. 
O'Mollhane,  132. 
O'Molony,  272,  286. 
O'Moloy,  81,  83,  86,  88,   268, 

277.  33°' 
O'More,  35,  41,  51,   65,  73,  76 


to  80,  83,  86,   107,   231,  267. 
300,  302,  305,  326,  327,  331 

334- 
O'Moroghoe,  54,  56,  57,  58,  352, 
O'Mulhonery,  125. 
O'MuIconry,  277,  294. 
O'MulIanes,  249,  297. 
O'Mulreny,  16. 
O'Mulrian,   88,  200,    203,   206, 

207,  208,  214,   216,  253,  255, 
284,  331. 

O'Murrihie,  186. 

O'Murry,  151,  154,  300. 

Onacht,  187,  208,  335. 

O'Nachton,  151,  154,  277. 

O'Nahan,  288. 

O'Neill, 3,6,  7,  8,  10,  11,  14,  17, 

21,  to  34,  76,87,  97,   IOO,  103, 
108,  223,    224,    226,    230,    247, 
250,   251,  253,    260,   26l,    267, 
270,  286,  301,  302,  304,  352. 
Oneyland,  21,  129. 
Oneylan,  19,  128,  129,  235. 
Ongestown,  94. 
1  O'Nolan,  16,  52,  54,  253,  254. 
Onulchalons,  13. 
Onye,  34. 
Ophaly,  253. 
I  O'Quin,    17,  21,    26,  250,   251, 

,283. 
O  Quirivane,  274. 
Oranmore,  273. 

O'Reilly,  2,  9,  24,  89,  105,  117 
to  122,  134,231,246,247,271, 
279,  287,  300,  311,  321,  350. 
O'Relly,  9,  89. 
Ordriscall,  160. 
*  O'Regan,  177. 
I  Orey,  30. 
Orgial,  90. 
O'Rhawley,  50. 

O'Rian,  88,  200,  203,  206,  208, 
[      214,  253,  255,  284,  331. 
Oriel,  23. 
O'Riodially,  26. 
,  O'Riordan,  205,  283. 
Ovme,  102. 

Ormond,  50,  51,  52,  53,  59,  64, 
67.  °9>  70.  71,  72,  73.  74.  76, 
77,  79,  84,  87,  88,  143,  207, 

208,  209,  211,  215,  217,  225, 
226,  254,  301,  302,  304,  330, 

332.  349- 
Ornaugh,  19. 
O'Roddy,  149. 
Orpen,  283. 
O'Renehan,  286. 
O'Rourk,  34,  141,  147,  148,  149. 

3  B 


378 


INDEX. 


i52>  255,  2?6,  300,  303,  304, 

325.  329- 
Osbertstown,  45,  46,  252. 
Osborne,  163,  278,  284. 
O'Scott,  50. 
O'Shagnessy,  131,  136,137,227, 

274. 
O'Shee,  69,  267. 
Ossory,  61,65,  67,  71,  73,  76,  79, 

80,  217,  230,  231,  235,  254, 

266,  285,  349. 
Ossory,  Upper,  73,  76,  216,  230, 

349- 
O'Sughrue,  168. 
O'Sullevan,  128,  157,  167,  16S, 

172,  173.  180  to  195,  2S0,  288, 

289,  350. 
O'Sullevan  Beare,  136,  168,225, 

282. 
O'Sullevan  Mor,  168,  230,  282. 
O'Toole,  36,  38,  41,  42,  43,  54, 

62,  264,  302. 
Ouran,  134. 
Outrich,  206. 
Overke,  255. 
Owen,  254. 
Ower,  137,  273. 
Owgan,  47. 
Owlert,  58. 
Owles,  142,  337. 
Owlortvicke,  58. 
Owney,  203,  206,  2S4. 
Ownhy,  135. 
Ownilechabees,  13. 
Ovvr,  258,  259. 


Tace,  92,  103,  107. 
Packenham,  270. 
Painstown,  46,  94,  264. 
Pale,  The,  4. 
Pallace,  78. 
Palles,  97,  263. 
Pallestown,  281. 
Palmerston,  37. 
Parke,  15,  58. 

Parliament  (Members  of),  349. 
Parres,  107. 
Parsons,  268. 
Parsonstown,  93,  268. 
Passage,  161,  164,  165,  239. 
Payen,  255- 
Paynestown,  94,  99. 
Pembroke,  60. 
Pennant,  277. 
Pentenie,  93,  99. 
Peppard,  5, 47,  62,  252,  258,  266, 
300. 


1  Peppardstown,  260. 
Perce,  122. 
Percy,  18. 
Perrot,  13,  16,  19,  26,  104,  107, 

119. 
Peter's  Well,  274. 
Pettetstowne,  256. 
Petits,  104,  107,  352. 
Phersone,  259. 
Phelin,  258. 
Phillipstown,  76,  Si,  82,  85,  87, 

244,  263. 
Philpotstown,  94. 
Phippes,  92,  ioo,  352. 
Phoores,  253. 
Phypo,  38. 

Piercy,  102. 

Piers,  39,  103,  104,  270. 

Pierstone,  94. 

Pigotts,  78,  79,  267,  350. 

Pilsworth,  235. 

Piltown,  165. 

Pincher's  Grange,  253. 

Pinner,  73. 

Platten,   92,   93,    94,   101,    106, 

107. 
Plunket,  4,  5,  38,  39,  91,  93,94, 

95,96,  97,  98,  227,  231,  232, 

260,  263,  268,  269,  352. 
Poble,  53. 

Poer,  162,  225,  231,   350. 
Pole  Hore,  62,  257,  266. 
Pollard,  270. 
Polomonty,  226. 
Polrancton,  256. 
Polrankan,  62. 
Pope,  86. 
Pormanston,  232. 
Portaferry,  105,  106,  260. 
Portarlington,  80. 
Portcroisi,  336. 
Porter,  93,  98,  III,  2S9,  352. 
Porterstown,  106,  III. 
Portmuck,  18. 
Portnahinch,  73,  81. 
Portnehill,  255. 
Portrane,  97. 
Portriff,  93.  94,  95,  96. 
Portumna,  134,  272. 
Possicktown,  94,  96. 
Pottinger,  260. 
Poulescastle,  225. 
Prover,  282. 
Powers  (see   Poers  and  Poors), 

67,  78,  161,165,  166,205,  231, 

245,  255,  277,  282,  284,  289. 
Powerscourt,  43,  264. 
Powerstoune,  38,  39. 


Powers  Wood,  72,  255. 
Prague,  64,  106,  162. 
Prenderfoote,  102. 
Prendergast,   61,   162,  163,  257, 

284,   350. 
Preston,  37,  93,  95,    225,  26S, 

269. 
Priests,  287,  294,  295. 
Priesthaggard,  61. 
Prim,  73. 
Prisugard,  257. 
Prospect,  280. 
Protfords,  39,  97. 
Protfortstone,  94. 
Proudestown,  99. 
Proudfootstown  Cas.,  92. 
Prountford,  95,  ioi. 
Pullen,  280. 
Purcell,  66,   67,  68,   203,  210, 

212,  254,  255,  256,  267,  280, 

335- 
Purcellstiers,  255. 
Purdon,  264. 
Pygot,  78. 

Q 

Queitrot,  290. 

Queen's  Co.,  34,  36,  44,  51,   73, 

74,   75,  81,    82,  84,  86,  89, 

261,  267,  327. 
Queen's  Fort,  78. 
Queenstown,  279. 
Quin,  21,  26. 

Quin  Abbey,  125,  128,  338. 
Quoniamstown,  279. 
Quylan,  91. 

R 

Raaour,  66. 
Raban,  239. 
Rachtor,  66,  28S. 
Radboy,  15. 
Rafeig,  98. 
Raferghe,  5. 
Raffin,  94,  98. 
Raffniall,  98. 
Rafoe,  31,  235. 
Ragget,  66,  255. 
Raghlins,  15. 
Rahedin,  253. 
Rahellin,  253. 
Rahen,  256,  275. 
Rahenderry,  265. 
Rainduf,  257. 
Rahine,  258,  279. 
Rahenderg,  257. 
Rakeall,  197,  331. 
Raleigh,  185,  532. 
Ram,  235,  266. 


INDEX. 


379 


Ramshead  Island. 
Ramalton  Castle,  31,  32. 
Ramellon  Castle,  32. 
Randallston,  95,  269. 
Ranelagh,  234,  269. 
Randol,  15. 
Randolfston,  190. 
Ranechadie,  12. 
Raphesk,  93. 
Raphoe,  32,  234,  285. 
Rarrody,  136. 
Rarush,  254. 
Rath,  101,  253. 
Rathaldron,  94,  97. 
Rathangan,  45. 
Rathalvey,  58. 
Ratharding,  254. 
Rathannan,  2S2. 
Rathbride,  48,  252. 
Rathcally,  72,  255. 
Rathclare,  4. 
Rathcoffy,  45,  47,  252. 
Rathcon,  94. 
Rathconnyl,  91. 
Rathcormack,  278. 
Rathcredon,  38. 
Rathdowney,  58,  256. 
Rathdrome,  42. 
Rathengerge,  54. 
Rath  Reynolds,  94. 
Rathesker,  4. 
Rathetam,  267. 
Rathfarnham,  264. 
Rathfeigh,  94. 
Rathfernen,  37. 
Rathgarvan,  254. 
Rath  House,  264, 
Rathkeale,  197,  331. 
Rathktnny,  94. 
Rathlin,  16. 
Rathlion,  97. 
Rathlonnane,  256. 
Rathmagolduld,  84. 
Rathmanee,  59,  60. 
Rathmokue,  60. 
Rathmore,  48,   51,    92,  96, 

252,  269. 
Rathnegarry,  51. 
Rathnetesky,  258. 
Rathode,  94,  95. 
Rathperise,  258. 
Rathpodenboy,  257, 
Rathronarie,  257. 
Rathroe  Cas.,  257. 
Rathsilben,  239. 
Rathshillane,  256. 
Rathtain,  94. 
Rathvilley,  51,  52. 


Rathwire,  103,  27 it 

Ratoathe,  95,  98. 

Ratoryn,  97. 

Ratroge,  254. 

Ratten,  106. 

Rattoo,  283. 

Raville,  253,  254, 

Rawyre,  102,  103. 

Raymond,    283. 

Raynolds,  83. 

Reade,  93,  269. 

Reagh,  257,  258,  259,  271,  276, 

279,  283. 
Reban,  232,  252. 
Reken,  289. 
Redbaye,  15,  18. 
Redestoune,  256. 
Red  Haven,  32. 
Redington,  272. 
Redmond,  61,  25*6. 
Redsherd,  196. 
Reeks,  The,  282. 
Reg,  240. 
Rehins,  275,   350. 
Reilly,  102. 
Remotestoune,  256. 
Remremonde,  258. 
Renville,  272,  338. 
Reough,   253. 
Representatives   of   the    Old 

Families,  260, 
Revenue,  240. 
Reynel,  73. 

Reynolds,  39,  276  35r. 
Reynoldstown,  39. 
Rhahin,  79,  80. 
Rheban,  265. 
Ribera,  286. 

Rice,  4,  163,192,  205,  2S2,  350. 
Richardstown,  5. 
Rider,  252,  264. 
Ridgway,  244,  351. 
Ricknhore,  38. 
Rincalisky,  168. 
Risserd,   167. 
97,  J  Riverstown,  92,  93. 
Riversdale,  268. 
Roan,  92. 
Robertstown,    45,    91,    93,    95, 

97.  99.  '99,  265. 
Robinson,  167. 
Robinstone,  95,  107. 
Roche,  57,  58,  60,  62,  164,  167, 

171,  184,  197,  199,   210,   223, 

225,  256,  257,  278,  280,   290, 

3°°.  351- 
Rochesland,  57,  60. 
Rochestown,  5,  69,  262. 


Rochford,    47,   50,   57,  61,    72, 
94.  95.  96,97, 163,  252,  256,  264 
Rockforest,  269. 
Roe,  5,  167,  276,  303,  351. 
Rogerstown,  93,  2=15. 
Rome,  288. 
Ronayne,  164,  184, 
Rooe,  94. 
Roold,  167. 
Rooth,  70. 
Rorie,  226. 
Rosbare,  239. 
Roristown,  269. 
Roscarbery,   Bishop,  172. 
Rosbrien,  279. 

Roscommon,  123,  131,  240,  241, 
255,  263,  266,  275,  276,   277. 
Roscrea,  215. 

Rosegarland,  57,  60,  62,  257. 
Rose  Hill,   275. 
Rosemeane,   99,    m,  141,  144, 

150,  15'- 
Roses,  96. 
Rosewood,  48. 
Roskain,  239. 
Rosmaynock,  258. 
Rosroe,  271. 
Ross   Carbery,    236,   239,    274 

283,  286. 
Rosse,    56,    59,    61,    167,    170, 

262,  268,  282. 
Rosselltoune,  257. 
Rossiter,  59,  60,  66,  256,  257, 
Ross  Hill,  272. 
Ross  Levin,  275. 
Ross  Lewin,  272. 
Rossmine,  95. 
Rossnarowe,   255. 
Rothe,  56,  66,  254,  286,  352. 
Round  Towers,  357. 
RouteThe,i3, 15, 17,  18,34,261. 
Rovan,  ioo. 
Rowe,  48,  93,  258. 
Rowen,  93. 

Rowestown,  93,  94,  97. 
Rowthstown,  94. 
Rush,  78,  238,  356. 
Russell,  9,    12,   27,  38,  39,  41, 

93,  101,  in,  183,   260. 
Russellston,  III. 
Russellswood,  253, 
Ryan,  198,  203,  214,  284. 
Rynana,   271. 

S 
Saintleger,  232. 
Sale,  93,  ioo,  290,  352. 
Salamanca,  343. 
Salestowne,  93,  100. 


380 


INDEX. 


Salisbury,  251. 

Sail,  215,  290. 

Sanders,  8,  28,   252. 

Sankey,  82,  161. 

Sanshill,  257. 

Sarsfield,  37,  48,  50,  60,  99.  100, 

167,  170,  252,  279,  281,  351. 
Sault,  252. 
Saunderscourt,  266. 
Saunderson,  263. 
Savages,  9,   10,   14,   48,  60,  105, 

232,  260,  265. 
Scarvagh,  271. 
Scarriff,  336. 
Scatterig,   12. 
Scotland,  234. 
Scoyne,  100. 
Scraghe,  268. 
Scryne,  93,  232,  276. 
Scurlogstown  Castle,  92,  100. 
Seaforde,  266. 
Seaton,  38,  283. 
Segerson,  252. 
Segrave,  5,  38,  39,  93,  263. 

293- 
Sergeant,  253. 
Serment,  254. 
Seskinrem,  254. 
Sessueman,  276. 
Sexton,  284. 
Seymour,  284. 
Shaen,  134,  135.  27'- 
Shanagollen,   271. 
Shanamullen,  267. 
Shandon,  164. 
Shane,  28,  88,  89,  103,  104,  106, 

114,  116,  350. 
Shane's  Castle,  260,  261. 
Shanganagh,  38. 
Shangarry,  254. 
Shankhill,  277. 
Shannon    (see   Sheynin),    172, 

216,  300,  303. 
Shee,  66,  69,  70,  205,  226.  254, 

267,  291,  351. 
Sheemore,   276. 
Sheerhes,  204. 
Sheestown,  69,  267. 
Sheffield,   73. 
Shelmalin,  56. 
Shenet  Castle,  199. 
Sherberre,  56. 
Sherkin,  168. 
Sherlock,  5,  38,  47,  60,  61,  96, 

100,  162,  163,  166,   252,  256, 

257,  292,  292,  350. 
Sherlockstown,  48,  252. 
Shewroyher,  188. 


:  Sheynan,  166,  196. 
Slieyne,  290. 
Sheynen,  81,  82,  102,  104,  113, 

122,   125,  131,  187,  iSS,  196, 

216,  238, 
Shebbirne,  256,  257. 
Shilelagh,   41. 
Shillecker,  255. 
Shilmalyre,  257. 
Shilogh,  36. 
Shirley,  22,   23. 
Short  Castle,  281. 
Shortall,  67,  71,  255. 
Shroughbooe,  254. 
Shyan,  166. 
Shynan  Castle,  78,   79. 
Sidon,  100. 
Sigen,  256. 
Siggenston,  253. 
Sinot  Court,  38. 
Skerrets,  133,  274. 
Skerries,  238. 
Skibbereen,  280. 
Skiddies,  164,  183. 
Skryne,  93. 
Slade,  60,  61. 
Sladde,  256,  257. 
Slane,  60,   69,  92,   94,  99,  227, 

260,  349. 
Slaney,  50,   56. 
Slaune,  The,  258. 
Sleggar,  71. 
Sleumaghe,  73. 
Slevey,  257. 
Slevoy,  60. 

Slewlogher,  169,  196,  331. 
Slewmargie,  30,  74,  232. 
Slievebloom,  75,  78,  82,  89. 
Slievecomer,  75. 
Slieve  Gallen,  297. 
Sligo,  2,  29,  123,  141,  144,  145, 

147,  148,  150,  238,   240,   275, 

276, 
Slingesby,  175. 
Sinarmore,  5,  260. 
Smith,  10,67,  71.80,97,252,281 
Smithstown,  38,  72,  94,  101. 
Sobieski,  47. 
Sonagh,  270. 
Sourley  Buy,  16. 
Southampton,  49. 
Sowa  Castle,  186. 
Sparke,  93. 
Spencer,  23. 
Spring.  194,  350. 
Stackallan,  92. 
Stackallen,  94. 
Slackpole,  204,  289. 


Stackes,    192. 

Stafford,  12,  34,  57,  61,  63,   7r 

244,  256. 
Stalorgan,  39. 
Stamen,    100. 
Stanihurst,  48,  58. 
Stanley,  4,  93,  343,  349,  351. 
Staples,  94. 
Staplestowne,  254. 
Stapleton,  284. 
Starallen,  94. 
Strangford,  238. 
Starr,  62. 

Starrowalshe,  258,  250. 
Staunton,  66. 

St.  Canice,  68,  70,  71,  72,  226. 
Stevenston,  91,  94,  100. 
Stephen  St.,  98. 
St.  Gudule,  275. 
St.  James'  Castle,  70. 
St.  John,  61,  62,  151,  244,  350. 
St.  John's  Bower,  265. 
St.  Kathrens,  39,  45. 
St.  Laurence,  73,  86,   102,   227. 
St.  Leger,  52,  71,  78,  185,   244, 

255,  262,  282,  350. 
St.  Mallins,  265. 
St.  Michell,  46,  232. 
St.  Mollines,  36,  51,  52,  53,  54, 

64,  253,  254. 
St.  Molyn,  253. 
Stokes,  38,  252,  284. 
Stookes,  94. 

Strabane,  27,  250,  297,  349. 
Stradbally,  78,  267. 
Straffane,  262. 
Straghmor'259. 
Strahard,  80. 
Strancally,  166. 
Strange,  71,  154,  350. 
Strangford,  10,  12,  238,  264. 
Streamstown,  274. 
Street,  no. 

Strong,  70,  71,  164,  2S6,  351. 
Sluart,  263. 
Stukeley,    59. 

St.  Wolstans,  37,  44,  48,  252. 
Suck,  131,  150. 
Suer,  33,  35,  56,    64,    157.   15S. 

303. 
Suffolk,  152,  267, 
Sullevan,  280,  350. 
Sunnagh,  104,  107. 
Supple,  203,  281, 
Surleboy,  16. 
Surnings,  252. 
Sutton,  38,  45,  46,  47,  6l,   252, 

256,257,  3}9. 


INDEX. 


58l 


Swan,  296. 

Swayne,  66,  JU 

Swedy  Lough,  103. 

Sweetman,  67,  71, 

Swilly  Lough,  30,  33. 

Swords,  36,  37,  38. 

Sydley,  102. 

Sydney,  19,  20,   23,  55,  76,  131, 

270. 
Sygin,  61. 
Syginston,  61. 
Sylane,  274. 
Syney,  102. 
Synot,   38,  56,   57,   58,  61,  64, 

256,  257,  25S,  266,  300,  350. 
Syonan,  104. 


Taffe,  4,  5,  73,  79,  93,  97.  260. 

Taghmon,  59,  62,  105. 

Taghunan,  61. 

Tagomane,  256. 

Tailten,  90. 

Tailor,  38,39,351. 

Talbot,  4,  37,  38,  43,  47,  92,  93, 

94.  95.  99.  10°.  IO°.  25°.  259, 

263,  292,349,  351. 
Talbotstown,  41. 
Tallaght,  261,  264,  269. 
Tallniall,  106. 
Tallon,  93,  94,  101. 
Tallow,  37,  166,  171. 
Taman,  256. 

Tample  Wodekann,  257. 
Tanconshanee,  59,  60. 
Tankard,  93,  99. 
Tankardstown,  79,  95. 
Tanrago,  276. 
Tappock,  39. 
Tara,  90,  93,  98. 
Tarbert,  109. 
Tarturs,  13. 
Tartayne,  38. 
Tassagard,  39. 
Tath-Rath,  95. 
Taylor,  38,  39. 
Teaquin  Castle,  134. 
Teara,  43. 

Teaghcroghan,  95,  101. 
Teeling,  269. 
Teenes,  3. 
Teffia,  84. 
Teighin,  258. 
Teling,  94,  95,  100. 
Telinstown,  101. 
Templemichael,  166. 
Templemore,  215. 


Templeoge,   37. 
Templeton,  262, 
Tempo,  262. 
Tempodessel,  262, 
Tenche,  266. 
Tennecarricke,  254. 
Tenne-Killeh,   79. 
Tennekille,  80. 
Tennelick,  231, 
Tentober,  257. 
Termingraghe,  24. 
Termonfecken,  92,  2J2. 
Terry,  192. 
Teurelan,  254. 
Tew,  163. 
Thistle-Keran,  93; 
Thomas  Court,   348. 
Thomond,    124,    127,    1 30, 
221,  231,  302,  336,  349. 
Thomnebaghy,   255. 
Thomyne,  254. 
Thomas  St.  99. 
Thomaston,  48,  66,  68. 
Thomastowne,  96. 
Thornburgh,  236. 
Thorne,  163. 
Thornton,  201,   206, 
Thurlesbeg,  284. 
Thurles,  215,  218. 
Thyvyn,  66. 
Tibbotnelong,  142. 
Ticooly,  274,  277. 
Ticroghan,  92, 
Tinerana,  264* 
Tinnahinch,  73,  79,  81. 
Tinraheene,  58. 
Tinterne,  57,  6o,  233. 
Tintubber,  257. 
Tipp,  252. 
Tipper,  45,  47, 349; 
Tipperary,    65,   68,    71,   74 
156,   158,  196,   207,  211, 
226,  234,  252,  262,  263, 
267,   270,  273,  278,  2S1, 
Tippersold,  38,  39. 
Tippston,  252. 
Tiranly,  142,  337. 
Tir-Bruinna  Sinna,  276. 
Tirerrill,  144,  145,  338. 
Tirhugh,  32. 
Tirke,  Mayne,  23S. 
Tirrell,   34,    100,   103,   107 

302,  327,  352. 
Tirriaugh,  19. 
Tirriaughelie,  20. 
Tiscorre,  259. 
Tlachta,  90. 
Toam,  234,  237. 


2l6, 


88, 
225, 
264, 
284. 


Tobberton,  38. 

Tobercaoch,  274. 

Tobin,  71,163,  210,225,  255>35° 

Tobragney,  208. 

Todd,  66,  235. 

Voghrighie,  251. 

Tohyrly,  54. 

Toledo,  286. 

Tolghan,  85. 

Tolmalag  Haven,  239. 

Tumand,  253. 

Tombs,   45,   60,  62,  63,  64,  68, 

69.  7'.  72.  355.  356.e'pass'n>- 
Tomcoyle,  258. 
Tomduff,  258. 
Tomgarrough,  253. 
Tomger,  257. 
Tomhaggard,  60,  61. 
Tomies,  280. 
Tomlaine,  257. 
Tomm  Dire,  259. 
Tomona,  276. 
Tomyne,  253. 
Tooles,  35,  40,  41,  42,  43. 
Togau,  73,  262. 
Towers,  Round,  357 

Towany,  15. 
Tracie,  8. 

Tract  on  Abbey,  281. 
Tralee,  239,  283. 
Traley,  189. 
Traley  Castle,  190. 
Tramore,  164. 
Tram,  282,  352. 
Traunts,  192. 
Travers,  38, 

Trent  Council  of,  286,  287. 

Trevers,  42. 

Trevor,  50. 

Tribleston,  94. 

Trim,  91,  92,  94,  95,   102,   234, 
244. 

Trimberton,  95. 

Trimleston,  92,  93,  94,  269,  349, 

Triscornagh,  104. 

Tristernagh,  234. 

Tristernagh  Abbey,   270. 

Tristinaughe,  103. 

Troddye,  67,  721 

Tromer,  62. 

Troneblie,  95. 

Trow,  23. 

Trough,  322. 

Trubly,  92,  97. 

Tuadrommeen,  278. 

Tuam,  125,  131,  227,  234,  237, 
273,  274,  286. 

Tubberlomunaugh,  257. 


3S2 


INDEX. 


Tuberngan,  253. 

Tuite,    90,    96,    103,    104,   107, 

154,  268,  270. 
Tuitestown,  103,  104,  107. 
Tullagh,  253,  254. 
Tullaghan,  105. 
Tullaghanbroge,  71. 
Tullaghagrory,  252. 
Tullaghard,  94. 
Tullamore,  268. 
Tullophelim,  51. 
Tullock,  94. 
Tullon,  277. 
Tullow,  65,  23!. 
Tully,  48,  51,  79,  252. 
Tullynally,  270. 
Tully  O'Dea,  127,  338. 
Tullyra,  274. 
Turbotstown,  270. 
Turner,  46,  62,   256,  351. 
Turning,  48. 
Turoe,  273. 

Turvey,  37,  38,  97,  99,  101. 
Tusher,  257. 
Tylin,  99,  101. 
Tymog,  79. 
Tymoghe,  252. 
Tynan,   34. 
Tynehinch,  226. 
Tynt,  97. 

Tyrconnell,   24,    25,   29,  30,  34. 
Tyrconnell,  Earl,    31,    47,   223, 

248,  251,  263. 
Tyrmin-Omungan,  24. 
Tyrone,  23,    24,    25,    120,    223, 

249,  250,  251,  262. 
Tyrone,  Earl,  8,  19,  20,  21,  22, 

23,  24,  26,  26,  28,  30,  31,  33, 
34.  63,  67,  70,  99,  119,  223, 
246,  251,  261,  297,  301,  302, 
303,  304,  349. 

Tywe,  67. 

U 

Ublogahell,  297; 

Uchterthera,  277, 

Uisnech,  83,  90, 

Ullard,  2,  255. 

Ulster,  I,  29,  34,  223,  237,  246, 
251,  287,  288,  302,   305,  343. 

Ulverston,  59. 

Uniacke,  281. 

Upper  Court,  226. 

Upton,  26r. 

Urquhart,  270. 

Uriel,  no. 

Usher,  38,  95,    101,    233,    263, 
264,  351. 

Uskerower,  101. 


Uskertye,  256. 

V 

Valdesoto,  Count,  106. 

Valentia,  222,  239,  282. 

Valley,  Knight  of  the,  202. 

Vaughan,  46. 

Veldon,  94,  98. 

Velvetstown,  281. 

Verdon,  4,  5,  107,  203,  352. 

Verona,  106. 

Vesey,  261,  263. 
W 

Wadding,  60,  161,  163,  164,  256, 
2S9,  290,  292,  293,  351. 

Wafer,  94,100,  258. 

Wakeley,  82,  91,  352. 

Wale,  53,  98,  164,  211,  253,  254, 
290,  352. 

Waleslogh,  255. 

Walker,  46. 

Wallentimore,  239. 

Wallis,  281. 

Wallscourt,  272. 

Wallop,  56,  57,  63,  64,  235,349. 

Walshe,  38,  42.  43,  48,  50,  62, 
66,  67,  70,  no,  126,  129,  160, 
161,  164,  170,  198,  203,  214, 
244,  252,  253,  254,  255,  256, 
258,  291,  292,  298,  351. 

Walterstown,  95. 

Walton,  264. 

Walworth,  264, 

Warbeck,  278. 

Ward,  260. 

Ward  Castle,  37. 

Ward  Hill,  90. 

Ware,  282. 

Waring,  92,  95,  350. 

Warringstone,  93, 95. 

Warren,  4,  38,  43,  48,  82,  87,  92, 

94.  99,  233.  352- 
Warrenstown,  4,  99,  233. 
Water  Castle,  231. 
Waterford,  35,  56,  59,  156,  157, 

159,  166,  216,   233,  236,    239, 

241,  267,  277,  280,  281,  2S9. 
Waterhous,  126,  129. 
Waters,  278. 
Waterston,   103,  no. 
Waton,  67,  71,  254. 
Weafy,  93. 
Weil,  95. 
Welchetown,  104, 
Weldon,  265,  352. 
Wellesley,   87,   232,    252,    253, 

268. 
Wellfort,  273. 
Wellington,  48,  265. 


Wells,  267. 

Wesley,  47,48,50,95,  96,  98,  352 

Wespelston,  39,  349. 

Westmeath,  82,  83,  89,  90,  100, 
102,  105,  106,  107,  112,  113, 
120,  149,  234,  240,  264,  268, 
269,  270,  271. 

Weston,  38,  39,  263. 

Westport,  275. 

Wexford,  35,  36,  41,  50,  54,  55, 
56,  57,  58,  62,  63,  64,  166, 
225,  226,  241,  243,  256,  261, 
264,  266,  267,  295,  298,  303. 

Wharton,  48. 

Whitechurch,  235,  352. 

White  Knight,  231. 

Whitfieldstown,  163. 

Whyte,  10,  12,  39,  44,  45,  48, 
62,  67,  94,  97,  129,  162,  200, 
204,  213,  256,  265,  289,  291, 
292,  351,  352,  355,  356. 

Whytney,  76. 

Whytty,  62,  63,  256,  257. 

Wicklow,  35,  36,  39,  41,  56,80, 
233,  238,  239,  259,  262,  264, 
282,  303. 

Wilkenstone,  94,  104,  350. 

Williams,  50,  85,  306. 

Williamstown,  264. 

Wilmington,  280. 

Winch,  244. 

Windsor,  235. 

Wingfield,  42,  244,  252,  264,  351 

Wirtemburg,  168. 

Wise,l6l,  163,  277,  290,  351. 

Witchurch,  256. 

Wogan,  45,  47,  50,  252,  253. 

Woghterard,  252. 

Woghtereay,  252. 

Woncestowne,  255. 

Woodbine  Hill,  280. 

Woodford,  266. 

Woodfort,  282. 

Woodgrage,  257. 

Woodhouse,   281. 

Wood  Parks,  269. 

Woodstock,  45,  271. 

Worrall,  5. 

Wotton,  5. 

Woulfe,  46,  197,  265. 

Wray,  263. 

Writers,  294. 

Wyartstone,  37,  38. 

Wycam,   38. 

Y 

Voughall,  15S,  167,170,  239,281. 

Young,  39,  47,  289. 

Youngstone,  47. 


DATE  DUE                   1 

SEP  -9 

1992 

JAN  2  0 

1 1 

. 

FEC 

UNIVERSITY  PRODUCTS,  INC.    #859-5503 

„iiiil 

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